Murder of Neal Rosenblum explained

Murder of Neal Rosenblum
Partof:Antisemitism in the United States
Location:Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Type:Homicide by shooting
Victim:Neal Rosenblum
Perpetrator:Steven M. Tielsch
Motive:Antisemitism
Charges:Third-degree murder

Child:yes
Sentence:10–20 years in prison

Neal Rosenblum was shot and killed on Thursday, April 17, 1986, by Steven M. Tielsch in Pittsburgh. The attack was motivated by antisemitic hate.

Personal life

Neal Rosenblum was the third of five children in an Orthodox Jewish family in Toronto, Canada. He was a rabbinical and computer science student. He married Manya Weingarten of the Squirrel Hill neighborhood of Pittsburgh in the spring of 1985.[1] As a devout Orthodox Jew, he prayed three times daily, attending services at synagogue or at Jewish schools.[2]

Shooting

A month after their daughter was born, the family visited Mrs. Rosenblum's parents, intending to stay for Passover. Rosenblum was 24[3] or 25 years old at the time.[4]

A few hours after arriving at his in-laws' house in Squirrel Hill, Rosenblum went to pray the evening services at the Kollel Bais Yitzchok Torah Institute Study Center. As he walked home from the synagogue, a car pulled up, and the passenger engaged him in conversation. The passenger then shot him five times.[5] [6] He was killed because of his Jewish appearance, wearing Haredi attire such as a black fedora.[7]

Rosenblum was still conscious when emergency workers arrived, and he provided some details of the attack. He died about five hours later while in surgery at University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.

Investigators were unable to develop leads for 12 years.

Development of case

In 1988, Tielsch and Sanford Gordon shared a cell in the Allegheny County jail, both on separate drug charges. Tielsch bragged that he had killed a Jew, and would often make antisemitic remarks and draw swastikas, a common antisemitic symbol, on himself. Gordon reported the information to the authorities, but they did not have enough evidence to make the case in 2000.[8] [9] At that time, the Cold Case Squad took over the investigation and got a corroborating witness. Twelve years after the original crime, police arrested the now 45-year-old killer.

Trials

Gordon was the star witness in all the trials. In the first three trials, an extensive roster of witnesses was used, many of them jailhouse informants or otherwise unsavory characters. For the fourth trial, the prosecutor streamlined the case, using more technologically advanced presentation such as PowerPoint and far fewer witnessess, concluding the proceedings in half the amount of time.

Tielsch's leg tattoo of a swastika was not admitted into evidence. His attorney argued that it could not be proven that he had already had the swastika at the time of the murder.

Tielsch's first three trials ended in a deadlocked jury. He was convicted of third-degree murder in a fourth trial in 2002,[10] with a sentence of 10 to 20 years.[11] The judge in the latter trial, Lawrence O'Toole, declared that the jury was giving the defendant a break by limiting charges to 3rd degree murder. The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania upheld the decision in 2007.[12] [13]

Tielsch was released from prison on October 23, 2017, after serving 15 years of the maximum 20.

Media

The prosecutorial doggedness in pursuing multiple trials generated controversy. The prosecutor explained it as due to the heinous nature of a hate crime, while the local newspaper rejected hate crimes as deserving special treatment. The newspaper's response drew public criticism.[14] [15]

After the Pittsburgh synagogue mass shooting in 2018 that killed 11 and injured 6, major media revisited the Rosenblum murder, which was also an anti-Semitic shooting attack that took place in the same neighborhood, and one in which the shooter also had no relationship with the victim.

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Rabbinical student slain on Squirrel Hill street. 18 Apr 1986. 2018-11-01. en. .
  2. News: On 4th try, Tielsch guilty of murder. 2018-11-01. https://web.archive.org/web/20181030003507/http://old.post-gazette.com/localnews/20020914tielschreg2p2.asp. 2018-10-30. en. . Alt URL
  3. Web site: Before synagogue mass shooting, a 1986 murder shook Pittsburgh's Jewish community. Washington Post. en. 2018-11-01.
  4. Web site: A people raised in violence had found peace in Squirrel Hill before synagogue mass shooting. Mike. Argento. October 28, 2018. October 28, 2018. York Daily Record.
  5. News: Fattel . Isabel . A Brief History of Anti-Semitic Violence in America . 29 October 2018 . . 28 October 2018.
  6. News: Farzan . Antonia Noori . Before synagogue mass shooting, a 1986 murder shook Pittsburgh's Jewish community . 29 October 2018 . . 29 October 2018.
  7. News: Canadian rabbinical student killed for 'the way he looked'. 14 Nov 2002. The Ottawa Citizen. 2018-11-01. The Associated Press. en. .
  8. News: Fuoco . Michael . Trial begins today in 1986 slaying of rabbinical student . 29 October 2018 . Pittsburgh Post-Gazette . 25 January 2001.
  9. Web site: A Brief History of Anti-Semitic Violence in America. Isabel. Fattal. October 28, 2018. October 28, 2018. The Atlantic.
  10. News: McKinnon . Jim . On 4th try, Tielsch guilty of murder . 29 October 2018 . Pittsburgh Post-Gazette . 14 September 2002.
  11. News: Rabbinical Student's Killer Is Sentenced. 14 Nov 2002. The Los Angeles Times. 2018-11-01. en. .
  12. Web site: Pittsburgh, PA - Conviction Upheld in Murder of Yeshiva Student. August 26, 2007. October 28, 2018. Vosizneias.
  13. News: U.S. court refuses appeal in '86 murder of Toronto man . 29 October 2018 . . 16 December 2008.
  14. News: Guilty as re-charged. 18 Sep 2002. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. 2018-11-01. en. .
  15. News: Crimes based on ethnic or religious hatred strike at the heart of human trust - Newspapers.com. Newspapers.com. 2018-11-01. en.