Jewish Pro-Israel Protester Killed; Attacker Sentenced To Just One Year In Jail
by Emmitt Barry, Worthy News Washington D.C. Bureau Chief
VENTURA, Calif. — (Worthy News) – A California judge has sentenced Loay Abdel Fattah Alnaji to one year in Ventura County Jail and two years of felony probation for the death of Paul Kessler, a 69-year-old Jewish-American man who died after a confrontation during dueling pro-Israel and pro-Palestinian demonstrations in Thousand Oaks in November 2023.
Alnaji had pleaded guilty to felony involuntary manslaughter and felony battery causing serious bodily injury after prosecutors said he struck Kessler, who fell and suffered a fatal head injury. The Ventura County District Attorney’s Office said it pushed for a state prison sentence and objected to the court’s decision.
Kessler’s death came just weeks after Hamas terrorists slaughtered more than 1,200 Israelis on October 7, 2023, and took hundreds hostage, triggering a wave of pro-Israel rallies — and rising antisemitic hostility — across the United States.
For many in the Jewish and pro-Israel community, the sentence is being viewed as a grave miscarriage of justice: a Jewish man stood publicly with Israel, was struck during a hostile confrontation, and is now dead — while the man responsible will serve only a single year in county jail.
The case also comes amid heightened concern over violence targeting Jews and supporters of Israel. In Boulder, Colorado, 82-year-old Karen Diamond died after suffering severe injuries in a June 2025 firebombing attack at a rally calling for the release of Israeli hostages held by Hamas. The attacker in that case, Mohamed Sabry Soliman, was later sentenced to life in prison without parole.
To Kessler’s family and many watching across America, the message from the California sentence is painful and unmistakable: justice was not fully served.
Prophetic Watch: The Rising Tide of Antisemitism
The growing hostility toward Jews and those who stand with Israel is more than a political trend or a social disorder. From a biblical perspective, it is a harbinger — a warning sign that ancient prophetic currents are moving beneath the surface of modern events.
The prophet Jeremiah spoke of a time when the Lord would regather the children of Israel from the nations where they had been scattered. But the passage also contains a sobering detail: “Behold, I will send for many fishers, says the Lord, and they shall fish them; and afterward I will send for many hunters, and they shall hunt them from every mountain and every hill, and out of the holes of the rocks” [Jeremiah 16:16].
For generations, Jewish people were drawn back to the Land by the “fishers” — waves of Zionist hope, biblical longing, and the promise of national restoration. But Jeremiah also warned of “hunters” — pressures, persecutions, and violent hostilities that would drive the Jewish people from the nations and awaken them to the urgency of returning home.
The rise of antisemitism across the West should therefore be viewed with spiritual sobriety. When Jews are attacked in the streets, when synagogues require armed guards, when Israeli flags become targets, and when Jewish lives are treated cheaply by courts and governments, something deeper is unfolding.
What we are witnessing may be one of the great prophetic signals of our generation: the same ancient hatred that has pursued the Jewish people through Egypt, Persia, Rome, Europe, and the Holocaust is rising again — but this time in the shadow of Israel’s rebirth.
The “hunters” of Jeremiah 16 are a reminder that history is not random. The God of Israel is still gathering, still warning, and still fulfilling His Word. And as antisemitism increases, the Church must not be silent. This is a moment to stand with Israel, comfort the Jewish people, and recognize that the God who scattered Israel also promised to bring them home.
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