The postcards came to their homes, where the kids sleep and the family photos sit on the walls. By the time the mail was opened, Georgia’s first law defining antisemitism had been signed, and the backlash was already in the box.
🧭 Why It Matters: People in Georgia saw a state law about antisemitism collide with open neo-Nazi hate aimed at a rabbi and the only Jewish member of the Georgia House. The case shows how threats can reach public figures and faith leaders where they live, even across state lines.
📌 What Happened: A federal jury in Macon found 32-year-old Ariel E. Collazo Ramos of High Point, North Carolina, guilty of mailing threatening communications with a hate crime enhancement on Nov. 4, 2025, after a two-day trial.
Ramos sent two nearly identical antisemitic postcards

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