Incredibly Insensitive’ Newspaper Cover Infuriates Readers — Some Call It ‘Anti-Semitic’
The New York Post’s Sunday cover is taking some heat.
It concerns the discovery of Menachem “Max” Stark’s body found burned and suffocated in a Long Island dumpster; the headline characterizes the Brooklyn real estate developer as a “slumlord” and asks: “Who didn’t want him dead?”
The article
quoted police sources and said Stark had such a lengthy list of enemies
that investigators aren’t sure where to start in the quest to solve his
murder, according to WCBS-TV in New York.
New York State Sen. Simcha Felder, D-Brooklyn, wants the Post to apologize.
“I condemn in the strongest possible
terms the incredibly insensitive and crass cover of today’s New York
Post which mocks the kidnapping and brutal murder of Menachem Stark,”
Felder said in a statement, WCBS noted.
“The Post must issue an immediate
apology to the Stark family and to all New Yorkers for its egregious
behavior and failure to exercise any judgment whatsoever in this
matter.”
Democratic City Councilman Stephen Levin also condemned the cover.
“The New York Post’s unbelievably
offensive headline this morning comes the day after Mr. Stark’s family
and children, as well as an entire community, laid him to rest and are
still mourning his death,” he said in a statement, WCBS reported.
“For the New York Post to suggest that
a person deserved to be murdered is sickening and reaches a new low.
The entire community is outraged by such a vulgar headline that is so
offensive and horrific. The New York Post should pull their story and
issue an apology to the family and community that are still in
mourning.”
The Post reported that Stark was
allegedly deep in debt before his murder and was part of numerous shady
real estate transactions, WCBS said. “Any number of people wanted to
kill this guy,” a law-enforcement source told the newspaper, WCBS added.
The Post released a statement late Sunday afternoon in response to the controversy.
“The Post does not say Mr. Stark
deserved to die but our reporting showed that he had many enemies, which
may have led to the commission of this terrible crime,” the statement
said, WCBS noted. “Our thoughts and prayers are with the family at this
time of loss.”
Twitchy posted quite a few tweets outraged at the cover, along with one that brings up anti-semitism:
Here are a few others:
A Change.org petition telling the Post to “stop the hate” drew nearly 4,800 signers as of 8:35 p.m Sunday.
“We are saddened and dumbfounded how
people can commit such heinous crimes against anyone, but especially
against such a generous person who wouldn’t hurt a fly,” said Rabbi
David Neiderman, executive director of the United Jewish Organizations
of Williamsburg, in a news release, WCBS reported.
“Every resource must be expended to
apprehend the criminals responsible and we call on anyone with
information about this crime to come forward.”
More from WCBS:
Surveillance video shows Stark being kidnapped late Thursday night. The 39-year-old victim left his Southside Associates real estate office, at 331 Rutledge St. in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, when two suspects struggled with him and forced him into a light colored 2006 or 2007 Dodge Caravan.Stark was likely duct-taped, police said.The suspects drove off with the victim inside. The minivan was last seen heading east on Broadway in Brooklyn, police said.A day later, his partially burned body was found inside a Dumpster at a Getty gas station on Cuttermill Road in Great Neck, Long Island.
Here’s surveillance video of what may be Stark’s kidnapping:
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