
Why 'racist' preacher couldn't be charged by police
A ruling in the Federal Court described Wissam Haddad's speech as containing "fundamentally racist and anti-Semitic" tropes and making "perverse generalisations" about Jewish people.
But police did not have scope to lay criminal charges when the incident was assessed, a senior officer has revealed.
"The legal advice was it wouldn't reach the threshold for prosecution," NSW Police Deputy Commissioner David Hudson told a state parliamentary inquiry on Friday.
The prospects of prosecution would change under laws taking effect in August, he added, although the legislation was not retrospective.
Mr Haddad has been ordered by the court to remove the sermons from social media and not publicly repeat similar statements.
The change targets intentional incitement of racial hatred, while existing laws dealt with publicly threatening or inciting violence.
"The difficulties in the legislation are well known within the Jewish community, which is why the civil action was commenced under a different threshold," Mr Hudson said.
The new law would "fill that gap", he said.
Its narrow focus on race has drawn criticism but the law may be expanded to protect other groups in the future.
The inquiry examining anti-Semitism in NSW was set up in February after incidents including the firebombing of a non-religious childcare centre near a synagogue and a Jewish primary school in Sydney's east.
The state Labor government used the incidents as part of its justification for also expanding anti-protest laws to ban rallies outside places of worship.
Australia's special envoy to combat anti-Semitism Jillian Segal clashed with politicians at the inquiry over a call to ban pro-Palestine protests she labelled "intimidatory" and "sinister" from city centre streets.
Labor MP Stephen Lawrence suggested her comments were an "uncivil way to describe them and the people participating" and risked creating a perception in the Jewish community that the state was letting them down.
"These sorts of calls that ultimately aren't grounded in law and reality can have a pernicious effect," he said.
Ms Segal did not accept that characterisation but acknowledged she had not attended the protests.
She relied on experiences detailed by those in the vicinity who had felt intimidated.
"It was really the vehemence and the violence for what was being advocated that I was objecting to," Ms Segal said.
"We should be able to go to our city and not feel that.
"They were being jostled, they weren't allowed to cross, there was shouting … and they were angry they could not access the shops that they wished to."
Moriah College principal Miriam Hasofer told the inquiry her school was spending $3.9 million a year on security, a figure that had nearly doubled since October 7, 2023, when Hamas attacked Israel.
"Education is constantly disrupted, our teachers are drained, our wellbeing team is overstretched," she said.
"Our leaders are operating like a counter-terrorism unit and this has become our normal."
The Jewish school, in Sydney's east, faced an average of one security incident per week in 2025, she said.
A spate of high-profile attacks over summer included the targeting of a Jewish community leader's former home and the spray-painting of anti-Semitic slurs in various prominent locations.
Mr Hudson said reports of anti-Semitism have increased.
More than 1100 hate incidents have been reported so far in 2025 - a third of which were anti-Semitic, compared with just over one-fifth of 1300 incidents reported in 2023.
An Islamist preacher who called Jewish people "vile" couldn't face criminal sanctions but new laws might soon allow police to lay charges for similar comments.
A ruling in the Federal Court described Wissam Haddad's speech as containing "fundamentally racist and anti-Semitic" tropes and making "perverse generalisations" about Jewish people.
But police did not have scope to lay criminal charges when the incident was assessed, a senior officer has revealed.
"The legal advice was it wouldn't reach the threshold for prosecution," NSW Police Deputy Commissioner David Hudson told a state parliamentary inquiry on Friday.
The prospects of prosecution would change under laws taking effect in August, he added, although the legislation was not retrospective.
Mr Haddad has been ordered by the court to remove the sermons from social media and not publicly repeat similar statements.
The change targets intentional incitement of racial hatred, while existing laws dealt with publicly threatening or inciting violence.
"The difficulties in the legislation are well known within the Jewish community, which is why the civil action was commenced under a different threshold," Mr Hudson said.
The new law would "fill that gap", he said.
Its narrow focus on race has drawn criticism but the law may be expanded to protect other groups in the future.
The inquiry examining anti-Semitism in NSW was set up in February after incidents including the firebombing of a non-religious childcare centre near a synagogue and a Jewish primary school in Sydney's east.
The state Labor government used the incidents as part of its justification for also expanding anti-protest laws to ban rallies outside places of worship.
Australia's special envoy to combat anti-Semitism Jillian Segal clashed with politicians at the inquiry over a call to ban pro-Palestine protests she labelled "intimidatory" and "sinister" from city centre streets.
Labor MP Stephen Lawrence suggested her comments were an "uncivil way to describe them and the people participating" and risked creating a perception in the Jewish community that the state was letting them down.
"These sorts of calls that ultimately aren't grounded in law and reality can have a pernicious effect," he said.
Ms Segal did not accept that characterisation but acknowledged she had not attended the protests.
She relied on experiences detailed by those in the vicinity who had felt intimidated.
"It was really the vehemence and the violence for what was being advocated that I was objecting to," Ms Segal said.
"We should be able to go to our city and not feel that.
"They were being jostled, they weren't allowed to cross, there was shouting … and they were angry they could not access the shops that they wished to."
Moriah College principal Miriam Hasofer told the inquiry her school was spending $3.9 million a year on security, a figure that had nearly doubled since October 7, 2023, when Hamas attacked Israel.
"Education is constantly disrupted, our teachers are drained, our wellbeing team is overstretched," she said.
"Our leaders are operating like a counter-terrorism unit and this has become our normal."
The Jewish school, in Sydney's east, faced an average of one security incident per week in 2025, she said.
A spate of high-profile attacks over summer included the targeting of a Jewish community leader's former home and the spray-painting of anti-Semitic slurs in various prominent locations.
Mr Hudson said reports of anti-Semitism have increased.
More than 1100 hate incidents have been reported so far in 2025 - a third of which were anti-Semitic, compared with just over one-fifth of 1300 incidents reported in 2023.
An Islamist preacher who called Jewish people "vile" couldn't face criminal sanctions but new laws might soon allow police to lay charges for similar comments.
A ruling in the Federal Court described Wissam Haddad's speech as containing "fundamentally racist and anti-Semitic" tropes and making "perverse generalisations" about Jewish people.
But police did not have scope to lay criminal charges when the incident was assessed, a senior officer has revealed.
"The legal advice was it wouldn't reach the threshold for prosecution," NSW Police Deputy Commissioner David Hudson told a state parliamentary inquiry on Friday.
The prospects of prosecution would change under laws taking effect in August, he added, although the legislation was not retrospective.
Mr Haddad has been ordered by the court to remove the sermons from social media and not publicly repeat similar statements.
The change targets intentional incitement of racial hatred, while existing laws dealt with publicly threatening or inciting violence.
"The difficulties in the legislation are well known within the Jewish community, which is why the civil action was commenced under a different threshold," Mr Hudson said.
The new law would "fill that gap", he said.
Its narrow focus on race has drawn criticism but the law may be expanded to protect other groups in the future.
The inquiry examining anti-Semitism in NSW was set up in February after incidents including the firebombing of a non-religious childcare centre near a synagogue and a Jewish primary school in Sydney's east.
The state Labor government used the incidents as part of its justification for also expanding anti-protest laws to ban rallies outside places of worship.
Australia's special envoy to combat anti-Semitism Jillian Segal clashed with politicians at the inquiry over a call to ban pro-Palestine protests she labelled "intimidatory" and "sinister" from city centre streets.
Labor MP Stephen Lawrence suggested her comments were an "uncivil way to describe them and the people participating" and risked creating a perception in the Jewish community that the state was letting them down.
"These sorts of calls that ultimately aren't grounded in law and reality can have a pernicious effect," he said.
Ms Segal did not accept that characterisation but acknowledged she had not attended the protests.
She relied on experiences detailed by those in the vicinity who had felt intimidated.
"It was really the vehemence and the violence for what was being advocated that I was objecting to," Ms Segal said.
"We should be able to go to our city and not feel that.
"They were being jostled, they weren't allowed to cross, there was shouting … and they were angry they could not access the shops that they wished to."
Moriah College principal Miriam Hasofer told the inquiry her school was spending $3.9 million a year on security, a figure that had nearly doubled since October 7, 2023, when Hamas attacked Israel.
"Education is constantly disrupted, our teachers are drained, our wellbeing team is overstretched," she said.
"Our leaders are operating like a counter-terrorism unit and this has become our normal."
The Jewish school, in Sydney's east, faced an average of one security incident per week in 2025, she said.
A spate of high-profile attacks over summer included the targeting of a Jewish community leader's former home and the spray-painting of anti-Semitic slurs in various prominent locations.
Mr Hudson said reports of anti-Semitism have increased.
More than 1100 hate incidents have been reported so far in 2025 - a third of which were anti-Semitic, compared with just over one-fifth of 1300 incidents reported in 2023.
An Islamist preacher who called Jewish people "vile" couldn't face criminal sanctions but new laws might soon allow police to lay charges for similar comments.
A ruling in the Federal Court described Wissam Haddad's speech as containing "fundamentally racist and anti-Semitic" tropes and making "perverse generalisations" about Jewish people.
But police did not have scope to lay criminal charges when the incident was assessed, a senior officer has revealed.
"The legal advice was it wouldn't reach the threshold for prosecution," NSW Police Deputy Commissioner David Hudson told a state parliamentary inquiry on Friday.
The prospects of prosecution would change under laws taking effect in August, he added, although the legislation was not retrospective.
Mr Haddad has been ordered by the court to remove the sermons from social media and not publicly repeat similar statements.
The change targets intentional incitement of racial hatred, while existing laws dealt with publicly threatening or inciting violence.
"The difficulties in the legislation are well known within the Jewish community, which is why the civil action was commenced under a different threshold," Mr Hudson said.
The new law would "fill that gap", he said.
Its narrow focus on race has drawn criticism but the law may be expanded to protect other groups in the future.
The inquiry examining anti-Semitism in NSW was set up in February after incidents including the firebombing of a non-religious childcare centre near a synagogue and a Jewish primary school in Sydney's east.
The state Labor government used the incidents as part of its justification for also expanding anti-protest laws to ban rallies outside places of worship.
Australia's special envoy to combat anti-Semitism Jillian Segal clashed with politicians at the inquiry over a call to ban pro-Palestine protests she labelled "intimidatory" and "sinister" from city centre streets.
Labor MP Stephen Lawrence suggested her comments were an "uncivil way to describe them and the people participating" and risked creating a perception in the Jewish community that the state was letting them down.
"These sorts of calls that ultimately aren't grounded in law and reality can have a pernicious effect," he said.
Ms Segal did not accept that characterisation but acknowledged she had not attended the protests.
She relied on experiences detailed by those in the vicinity who had felt intimidated.
"It was really the vehemence and the violence for what was being advocated that I was objecting to," Ms Segal said.
"We should be able to go to our city and not feel that.
"They were being jostled, they weren't allowed to cross, there was shouting … and they were angry they could not access the shops that they wished to."
Moriah College principal Miriam Hasofer told the inquiry her school was spending $3.9 million a year on security, a figure that had nearly doubled since October 7, 2023, when Hamas attacked Israel.
"Education is constantly disrupted, our teachers are drained, our wellbeing team is overstretched," she said.
"Our leaders are operating like a counter-terrorism unit and this has become our normal."
The Jewish school, in Sydney's east, faced an average of one security incident per week in 2025, she said.
A spate of high-profile attacks over summer included the targeting of a Jewish community leader's former home and the spray-painting of anti-Semitic slurs in various prominent locations.
Mr Hudson said reports of anti-Semitism have increased.
More than 1100 hate incidents have been reported so far in 2025 - a third of which were anti-Semitic, compared with just over one-fifth of 1300 incidents reported in 2023.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


West Australian
28 minutes ago
- West Australian
Australia's Jewish communities need increased protection, Opposition tell Prime Minister
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has been urged to do more to protect Australia's Jewish communities following an arson attack on an east Melbourne synagogue on Friday night. Some 20 people were inside the synagogue at the time of the incident, in which flammable liquid was poured on the front door and set alight. The occupants managed to escape via the rear of the building and no one was injured. Shadow attorney-general Julian Leeser said Mr Albanese needed to follow the lead of other world leaders in lifting efforts to protect Jewish communities from hateful attacks against the backdrop of conflict in the Middle East. Mr Leeser said the PM had ignored a letter, sent on June 15, from Opposition leader Sussan Ley, shadow minister for home affairs Andrew Hastie and himself which had stressed the need for greater protection. 'This is a very sad day for Australia . . . one of the oldest synagogues in Australia has been fire bombed,' he told reporters on Saturday. 'It's a synagogue that bespeaks the rich and long history of the Jewish people in this country. There's even a prayer for the King there that goes back to Queen Victoria's time in both Hebrew and English. 'This is an attack on all Australians. It is not just an attack on the Jewish community and it sickens me, but yet again the Jewish community is having to put up with these attacks, and the increasing anti-Semitism people think has gone away but continues, sadly, unabated.' Mr Leeser said the Opposition was putting the PM on notice to take more steps to protect the Jewish community. 'I don't know that he's done all he can here,' he said. 'We're calling on him to explain what measures he has taken to protect the Jewish community, and if he didn't take increased measures, why he didn't take increased measures at that time.' Mr Leeser said there needed to be increased police presence and security around Jewish community buildings. 'We have got to put an end to the hate that we see in this country,' he said. Victorian premier Jacinta Allan has condemned the synagogue attack as 'disgraceful behaviour by a pack of cowards'. 'That this happened on Shabbat makes it all the more abhorrent,' she said in a statement. 'Any attack on a place of worship is an act of hate, and any attack on a Jewish place of worship is an act of anti-Semitism.' On Saturday, police released the image of a man detectives want to speak to about the incident. He has been described as being of Caucasian appearance, believed to be in his 30s with a beard and long hair. Damage from the fire was contained to the front entrance.

The Age
2 hours ago
- The Age
‘Sheep do not judge their shepherd': Sermon after child abuse conviction shocks victims
A senior Sydney priest has warned his followers 'sheep do not judge their shepherd' in a sermon about his divided church after a veteran cleric was found guilty of child sexual abuse days earlier – shocking victims and experts. Meanwhile, a document penned by the paedophile priest himself, which ordered followers 'when you are abused, be quiet', has been quietly removed after decades in a government registry. Alexis Rosentool was found guilty on June 20 of child sexual abuse dating from the 1980s and 2000s, when he was a priest in the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia (ROCOR) in Sydney. The Herald revealed pro-Russian propagandist Simeon Boikov, aka Aussie Cossack, had collaborated with police to convince victims to speak up and bring down Rosentool. The case unexpectedly landed Boikov in the Russian consulate, where he remains after 930 days, having fled there after being arrested for breaching a suppression order over Rosentool's name. Loading Rosentool's conviction has divided the ROCOR church. Some maintain support for him, according to Archpriest Boris Ignatievsky of the Cabramatta church, where Rosentool once served. 'Sadly, this sorrowful event has split our diocesan community, those who are for the resolution and those against,' Ignatievsky told his congregation on Sunday. Ignatievsky said members had 'succumbed to the sinful temptation' of judging others.

Sky News AU
2 hours ago
- Sky News AU
Melbourne synagogue fire forces evacuation amid protest disruption at restaurant
A suspicious fire at an East Melbourne synagogue has forced those inside to flee through the rear of the building, with Premier Jacinta Allan slamming the 'disgraceful behaviour'. Police also responded to a protest targeting an Israeli restaurant in the city's CBD near the same time. An unknown man entered the grounds of the Albert St synagogue at about 8pm, pouring a flammable liquid on the front door and setting it alight before fleeing on foot, police say. Firefighters attended the scene and the fire was contained to the entrance. Police have confirmed about 20 people were inside the synagogue at the time of the incident and were forced to escape through the rear entrance. No injuries were reported. An arson chemist will examine the scene and police are reviewing CCTV and other evidence. The motivation behind the incident is still being investigated. 'Police are engaging with people from the synagogue and other representatives from the Jewish community to ensure appropriate supports are in place,' Victoria Police said in a statement. 'There is absolutely no place in our society for anti-Semitic or hate-based behaviour.' East Melbourne Synagogue rabbi Dovid Gutnik said the community was 'lucky' the fire didn't escalate further. 'There were children playing … this is a family synagogue,' Rabbi Gutnik said. 'That's the really scary thing because they could have opened the door and the person clearly had bigger plans, 'It could have been a lot worse because those doors are wooden and there's carpet, so we were lucky the response was quick.' Rabbi Gutnik said they were considering enhancing security but emphasised that a place of worship shouldn't need such extreme measures. 'We actually have some really good security measures, which actually were tested and held up last night,' he said. 'If there's anything more than we can do it's more of an emotional thing than a practical thing.' In a separate incident, about 70 protesters gathered on Swanston Street about 5.30pm to demonstrate against police presence at public rallies. Police said a smaller group then split off just after 8pm and walked to a restaurant on Hardware Lane and began shouting offensive chants. The front door of popular Israeli restaurant Miznon was smashed during the chaos. Police were called to the scene and directed the group to leave. A 28-year-old from Footscray was arrested for hindering police and released on summons. Others were identified for possible follow-up. 'Victoria Police is disappointed with the actions of protesters in the Melbourne CBD on Friday night,' police said in a statement. 'Victoria Police continued to support the rights of Victorians to protest peacefully but will not tolerate the kind of anti-social and violent behaviour that was witnessed this evening.' Miznon confirmed they were still planning to open on Saturday. Ms Allan has labelled the synagogue fire as anti-Semitism, saying it had 'no place in Victoria'. 'Any attack on a place of worship is an act of hate, and any attack on a Jewish place of worship is an act of anti-Semitism,' Ms Allan said. 'This is disgraceful behaviour by a pack of cowards,' she said. 'That this happened on Shabbat makes it all the more abhorrent.' Melbourne Lord Mayor Nick Reece said he was 'angry' and 'dismayed' about Friday's events. 'The criminal attacks on Israeli businesses in the CBD and the East Melbourne Synagogue are shocking, and should be condemned in the strongest possible terms,' Mr Reece said. 'I am angry and dismayed that once again our community is confronted with the despicable and racist actions of a few people. My thoughts are with the Jewish and Israeli communities, who are hurting deeply after these vile attacks. 'Everyone deserves the right to enjoy the most basic human acts, like practising your faith or enjoying a meal, without being attacked or vilified.' Executive Council of Australian Jewry co-chief executive Alex Ryvchin called for those responsible to face the 'full force of the law'. 'These events are a severe escalation directed towards our community and clear evidence that the antisemitism crisis is not only continuing, but getting worse. We urge all sides of politics and all Australians to condemn these deplorable crimes,' he said. 'Those who chant for death are not peace activists. Those who would burn houses of prayer with families inside do not seek an end to war.' Originally published as Synagogue fire sparks evacuation, protesters target Israeli restaurant in Melbourne