CHICAGO (Reuters) – A Chicago man has been arrested and charged with a felony hate crime for allegedly smashing the window of a city synagogue and putting swastika stickers on its front door, police said on Wednesday.
Stuart Wright, 31, was arrested by the Chicago Police Department on Tuesday. He has been charged with one felony count of hate crime to a church or synagogue and one felony count of criminal damage.
Wright is scheduled to appear in a Chicago bond court on Thursday, police said in a statement.
Police said Wright smashed the large front window of the Chicago Loop Synagogue early on Saturday and affixed swastika stickers to the building’s front doors.
The attack, which was captured on surveillance video, was condemned by Illinois Governor Bruce Rauner.
There have been a number of hate and bias incidents reported recently in the United States. In January, a fire gutted a Texas mosque, with federal law enforcement officials ruling it arson.
On Sunday, a story about subway riders in New York working together to clean up neo-Nazi graffiti went viral on social media.
(Reporting by Timothy Mclaughlin in Chicago; Editing by Peter Cooney#)