Police in New York on Monday were investigating two cases involving swastikas drawn or painted in public spaces, as civil rights activists said there had been a surge in hate crimes following last week's U.S presidential election.
Surveillance video was released of a suspect wearing a gray sweater and backpack, who is believed to have spray-painted a large swastika in front of a 78-year-old man's home in Brooklyn on Saturday, police said. The man's residence is in the borough's Crown Heights section, a predominantly Jewish area.
Also on Saturday, swastikas were drawn on four dormitory doors at the New School, a progressive private university in Manhattan that includes the renowned Parsons School of Design.
School president, David Van Zandt, said police were investigating, and that the graffiti was "intended to threaten and express hatred toward some of our students because of their identity."
Civil rights groups say racial and religious minorities nationwide have been targeted following Donald Trump's triumph in the U.S. presidential election.
Civil rights leaders have said his divisive campaign rhetoric emboldened a few supporters to spread racist messages.
Since the vote, Trump himself has called for peace and unity, and has denounced the white supremacist groups that supported him.
Some Trump supporters say they, too, have been...read more at Reuters