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In early 2017, a wave of more than 2,000 bomb threats were made against Jewish Community Centers in the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Norway, and Denmark. Two arrests and two convictions were made in connection with the threats: Michael Ron David Kadar, a dual American-Israeli citizen, who received a ten year sentence, along with Juan M. Thompson, a former journalist, who received a five year sentence.

Theories
Jerry Silverman of the Jewish Federations of North America said the threats were part of a "coordinated effort" to intimidate American Jews. In February, during an interview on CNN, U.S. Congressman Jerrold Nadler said that some supporters of Donald Trump were responsible for the threats. Trump denounced the JCC bomb threats and anti-Semitism, and said that this may be a case of someone trying to make others look bad.

In an op-ed for The Baltimore Sun, deputy editor Tricia Bishop said the threats represent a growing attitude of racial intolerance in the United States, but probably no specific group or person was responsible for the threats. She implored readers to "stand up ... before it's your children they come for".

Perpetrators
In March 2017, two persons were arrested on separate charges of making a number of the bomb threats:

African-American journalist
Juan M. Thompson, a former journalist for The Intercept, was charged with responsibility for at least eight of the incidents. According to media reports, Thompson had called in the threats in an attempt to frame a woman whom he had previously dated. According to the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the woman had been the subject of previous harassment by Thompson, which included an alleged attempt by him to falsely report her for possession of child pornography. On 13 June 2017, Thompson pleaded guilty to sending bomb threats to Jewish community centers.

Israeli-American man
A 19-year-old Jewish Israeli-American named as Michael Ron David Kadar, was arrested in March 2017 in Ashkelon, Israel and charged with responsibility for "dozens" of the threats. Kadar had earlier been rejected from enlistment in the Israel Defense Forces due to mental health issues.

According to Israeli police, Kadar had used "advanced technologies" to disguise his voice and mask the fact the calls were originating from Israel. According to court documents, Kadar allegedly advertised on the dark web the service of threatening any school for $30. Kadar's defense attorney said he has a brain tumor, which may have influenced his behavior. He was suspected of threatening over 2,000 different institutions in the US, Canada, the United Kingdom, New Zealand, and Australia including the Israeli Embassy in Washington, the Israeli consulate in Miami, schools, malls, police stations, hospitals and airlines. His threats reportedly caused fighter jets to be scrambled, planes to dump fuel and make emergency landings, and schools to evacuate.

In April 2017, an indictment against Kadar was filed in an Israeli court charging him with several crimes including an attempt to extort a United States senator, "publishing false reports causing public panic, conspiring to commit a crime, hacking computers to commit a crime, and violations of money-laundering laws". In the same month, a similar indictment was filed against him in a federal court in Florida charging him with 28 crimes, and he was separately charged with 3 additional crimes in a federal court in Georgia. Israeli authorities reportedly refused to extradite him to the US, preferring to try him in Israel. In June 2018, he was convicted in closed court on hundreds of counts including charges of extortion, publishing false information that caused panic, computer offenses, and money laundering.

In November 2018, he was sentenced in closed court to 10 years in prison, plus a fine and 1 year probation. Kadar was not named in Israeli courts because he was tried as a minor, but he was identified in indictment papers issued by the US. He would have been sentenced to 17 years if not for his mental issues: autism spectrum and paranoid delusions. Described as highly intelligent, his crimes earned him $240,000 in Bitcoin, worth over $1 million at the time of the sentence. Kadar refused to hand over the password to his Bitcoin digital wallet.

Who is this "hacker"?
Michael Ron David Kadar, the man arrested in Israel for the threats and charged in U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida &lt;cite>, is described variously as a 17 or 18 year old teenager with a brain tumor and autism. &lt;cite> The Israeli authorities' records show that the residence in Ashkelon where he was captured, and where the threats originated, was occupied by one woman. She was Dr. Tamar Kadar, a researcher into the effects of chemical weapons at the Mossad-operated Israel Institute for Biological Research. &lt;cite>

However, the man charged in Florida (and in other jurisdictions in the U.S.) was born in 1990, lived in Illinois, was actually incarcerated at the time of the phone threats, and is Dr. Tamar's son. The purportedly 17-18 year old person who was arrested, charged, and convicted in closed court in Israel doesn't actually exist, while Dr. Tamar's son (27 at the time of the arrest) traveled to "visit Mom" in Ashkelon at the time of the arrest, and has since been serving his sentence for drug crimes in the U.S., NOT Israel.