'He can't think straight': Mom pleads for teen charged with threatening Jewish centres
18-year-old Michael Ron David Kadar's mother says 'he's autistic,' suffered from brain tumour
An Israeli-American teenager accused of making dozens of bomb threats to Jewish community centres was identified for the first time on Friday in separate criminal complaints filed in U.S. federal courts in Florida and Georgia that linked him to hundreds of hoax calls in 2015 and 2017.
Michael Ron David Kadar, 18, who has dual citizenship and lives in Israel, made at least 245 threatening telephone calls between Jan. 4 and March 7, 2017, many targeting Jewish community centres in the United States, according to the Florida complaint.
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Kadar also appears linked to more than 240 hoax threats called into schools in the United States and Canada between August and December 2015, forcing the evacuation of thousands of students, according to the Georgia complaint.
In Canada, threats were made recently to Jewish community centres in Vancouver, Calgary, Winnipeg, Toronto and London, Ont.
Kadar, who is Jewish, has been in custody in Israel since his arrest there on March 23. His name had been withheld by Israeli authorities pending a formal indictment, which is expected within days.
U.S. and Israeli authorities have not offered a possible motive. Kadar's defence lawyer in Israel has told reporters he has a high IQ, but the emotional intelligence of a five-year-old.
Kadar's American-born mother said in an interview with Israel's Channel 2 that her son was home-schooled after he was unable to function in school due to a brain tumour.
"He's autistic," she said. "He can't control it. He can't think straight."
In the same interview, Kadar's father, who is Israeli, said, "To all the Jews in America, I want to say clearly, we are very, very sorry, from the bottom of our hearts." Both parents were filmed in silhouette to protect their identities.
The U.S. Justice Department did not say whether it would seek his extradition.
The waves of threats against Jewish groups forced widespread evacuations and prompted concern among Jewish leaders about a resurgence of anti-Semitism. Many Jewish community centres took steps to heighten security in response.
Authorities have said the calls also went to institutions in Australia, New Zealand and Canada.
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The complaints against Kadar provided new detail about the evidence authorities have, including a flash drive found in his laptop containing recordings of numerous telephoned threats.
Kadar spontaneously told officers who arrested him at his house in Ashkelon, Israel, that he "did not do it," according to the Florida complaint. When asked what he meant, he referred to the Jewish community centre threats, even though no officer had mentioned them, the complaint said.
Kadar also has a speech impediment that matched one observed in recordings of the calls, U.S. authorities said. He allegedly used masking technology to hide his location and disguise his voice.
It was not immediately clear why charges were brought only in Florida and Georgia, after Jewish centres in dozens of states were hit by Kadar's alleged threats.
The Florida complaint formally charges him with 15 threats, including against a United Airlines flight at Orlando's airport and several Jewish schools. In Georgia, he faces a single count for threatening a private residence in Athens, Georgia, in January, in part because he was not yet 18 when he made the 2015 school threats in that state and therefore cannot face charges as an adult.
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In a statement, the JCC Association of North America praised the "leadership and determination" of Attorney General Jeff Sessions and federal investigators.
U.S. authorities previously made one other arrest in connection with the threats. Juan Thompson, a disgraced journalist, is accused of making several threats to Jewish organizations while posing as an ex-girlfriend as part of a revenge plot against her.
He has denied the charges.