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A Pennsylvania man faces 25-years-to-life in prison if convicted on charges related to a
Midwood arson spree last month. Photo via Twitter/@FDNY
Pennsylvania man indicted
for allegedly setting rabbi’s
Midwood home ablaze
BY CHANDLER KIDD
A Pennsylvania man faces 25-years-tolife
in prison for allegedly setting fi re
to three Midwood homes and injuring
11 people in a failed attempt to kill a local
rabbi, according to Brooklyn’s top
prosecutor.
“This defendant allegedly traveled
to Brooklyn with the sole intent to kill
and had no concern for the dozens of
people he deliberately put in harm’s
way,” said District Attorney Eric Gonzalez.
Matthew Karelefsky, 41, set fi re to
Rabbi Jonathan Max’s E. 17th Street
home — while his children slept within
— at 3:50 a.m. on June 13, and the blaze
quickly spread to neighboring homes
before fi refi ghters could smother it,
according to Gonzalez.
Karelefsky held a long-standing
grudge against Rabbi Jonathan Max
that investigators believe led him to
commit the crime, the district attorney
said.
In 2012, Karelefsky published the
fi rst of numerous Facebook Posts
threatening to kill Rabbi Max and accusing
the holy man of molesting him
as a child, warning other users to
“keep minor children away from Rabbi
Jonathan Max of Brooklyn.”
Max denied the abuse allegations,
saying he hadn’t met Karelefsky
as a child. Instead, the rabbi
claims the defendant’s vendetta began
after his wife filed for divorce in
2010, and that the Pennsylvania man
has blamed him for their separation
ever since.
“He wanted to kill me because, in
his mental state he felt that he had to
be totally in control of his family,” Max
said. “He wrote his thoughts down on
Facebook and he was angry at me because
he didn’t understand the divorce
even though I was against it.”
Karelefsky’s hated Max enough to
get tattoos on his right arm that read
“Never let go of the hatred — kill Rabbi
Max,” and “Yemach shmo,” a Hebrew
term for the obliteration of the person’s
name, according to court documents.
And this isn’t the fi rst time that
Karelefsky has been arrested for engaging
in his vendetta with Max. Records
show that the Pennsylvania
man was cuffed in his home state for
making terrorist threats against the
rabbi — including a Facebook post
that read “My way of showing I don’t
believe in God will be by killing my
number one enemy Rabbi Max” —
in 2017, although a judge later dismissed
the charges for jurisdictional
reasons, writing that the case should
prosecuted in the victim’s home state
of New York.
Karelefsky was arraigned Monday
on a 17-count indictment that includes
charges of fi rst-degree attempted murder
and second-degree arson before
Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Martin
Murphy, who ordered him held
without bail and scheduled his next
court appearance for Sept. 10.
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