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New Jersey police seek killer who gunned down a Muslim leader outside Newark mosque

A police vehicle is parked outside the Masjid-Muhammad-Newark Mosque in Newark, N.J.
A police vehicle is parked outside the Masjid-Muhammad-Newark Mosque in Newark, N.J., on Wednesday. The mosque’s resident imam, Hassan Sharif, was shot and killed early Wednesday outside the mosque.
(WABC-TV)
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Police in New Jersey hunted Thursday for the killer of a Muslim leader who was shot outside his mosque before morning prayers, offering cash to anyone who can help them make an arrest. Authorities said they had no evidence that religious hate motivated the imam’s slaying but vowed to protect people of faith amid soaring reports of bias attacks across the U.S.

The killing of Imam Hassan Sharif as he prepared to open the Masjid Muhammad-Newark mosque on Wednesday has generated an intense law enforcement dragnet. The state’s attorney general pledged to assist county and local officials, and the Essex County sheriff announced a $25,000 reward.

Sharif’s shooting comes amid intensifying bias incidents against Muslims and Jews since Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7, provoking a punishing war in the Gaza Strip.

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The Council on American-Islamic Relations, the nation’s largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization, recorded more than 2,000 bias incidents against U.S. Muslims in the first two months after the Mideast attacks began, up from nearly 800 in the same period last year.

The council on Thursday said it was offering a $10,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction in the imam’s death.

Police are working to identify and arrest the shooter of an imam gunned down outside a mosque in Newark, N.J.

“Due to the unprecedented spike in anti-Muslim bigotry and violence we have witnessed in recent weeks, local, state and national law enforcement authorities must thoroughly investigate the shooting of Imam Hassan Sharif and keep the Muslim community safe,” CAIR National Executive Director Nihad Awad said.

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New Jersey Atty. Gen. Matt Platkin said Wednesday there’s no evidence yet that Sharif’s killing was a hate crime, but he and other officials didn’t detail how they determined that, or offer more details beyond saying Sharif was shot more than once in his car about 6 a.m., and was quickly taken to the adjacent University Hospital, where he died in the afternoon.

Even without evidence of a connection to anti-Muslim bias, authorities explicitly acknowledged the broader global context.

The Palestinian cause has never had so much support. But some Palestinian Americans say the movement has a messaging problem.

“I want every resident of our state to know that we are bringing all of our resources to bear to keep our Muslim friends and neighbors safe as well as all New Jerseyans safe,” Platkin said.

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Sharif had been the resident imam at his mosque for five years and was active in the interfaith community, city officials said. Among other things, he helped oversee the mosque’s involvement as a safe house where people could go to avoid violent interactions with police, which “greatly assisted” the apprehension of felons and serving of warrants, Newark Public Safety Director Fritz Fragé said.

For nearly two decades Sharif also worked as a transportation security officer for the Transportation Security Administration at Newark Liberty International Airport, said TSA spokesperson Lisa Farbstein.

“We are deeply saddened to learn of his passing and send our condolences to his family, friends and colleagues,” she said in an emailed statement.

In a video statement posted on its website, the mosque offered prayers and said the community would focus on delivering Sharif his last rites and burial. The statement described Sharif as a brother, friend, father and husband and called on the community to be mindful of the family’s grief.

Even before the Gaza war, antisemitism was on the rise. That has deeply unsettled many American Jews, accustomed to seeing the U.S. as a safe haven.

Sharif’s death follows other recent killings of religious leaders or at houses of worship that officials said weren’t tied to bias.

In Detroit, authorities said there wasn’t a “ shred of evidence ” that the killing of a synagogue leader in her home in October was motivated by antisemitism. In Upper Darby, Pa., authorities said the death of a man outside a mosque was the result of a carjacking.

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