Teaneck police and the Bergen County Prosecutor's Office ruled that an incident today at a kosher bagel store in Teaneck did not rise to the level of a bias crime, local officials said. 

Police initially investigated the incident — in which a suspect angrily confronted and assaulted patrons at a popular kosher bagel store in Teaneck — as a possible bias incident because the suspect allegedly used anti-Semitic slurs at the eatery, which is frequented by Orthodox Jewish customers.

But the Prosecutor's Office examined the evidence and determined that it does not rise to the level of a bias crime, Teaneck officials said. 

The suspect may have been emotionally unstable, local officials said. 

Deputy Mayor Elie Katz said he was frustrated that many of the incidents directed against the Jewish community in recent months — such as one in July in which a group of people used water pistols to spray worshipers exiting a synagogue with a dark liquid and hurled anti-Semitic slurs at them — were not labeled bias crimes. "It seems like in the state of New Jersey there's an unreasonably high bar for what determines a bias crime." 

Police received a call at about noon on Wednesday regarding an altercation inside Sammy's Bagels on Queen Anne Road.  

"The preliminary investigation revealed that this person entered the store and confronted two patrons. He engaged in a verbal dispute with the first patron by using an expletive while telling him to take off his hat," Police Chief Glenn O'Reilly and Township Manager Dean Kazinci said in a joint statement. Read more at NorthJersey.com