FBI releases new details on Jewish day school administrator’s child pornography scheme
The FBI is alleging that a Jewish day school rabbi tricked a
14-year-old boy into sending him sexually explicit photos of himself.
Rabbi Jonathan Skolnick was arrested Friday night on several
charges, including the production and possession of child pornography and child
enticement. He was an assistant principal at the middle school of SAR Academy,
a prestigious Modern Orthodox school in the Bronx. He also had taught for six
years at the Yeshivah of Flatbush, an Orthodox school in Brooklyn.
SAR’s principal, Rabbi Binyamin Krauss, wrote in an email to
parents on Tuesday that the school had reason to believe that students there
may have been targeted by Skolnick.
Skolnick was fired by SAR, formally the Salanter Akiba
Riverdale Academy, when it learned of the arrest. He had worked there for 14
months.
A complaint submitted by the FBI Saturday and made available
Tuesday detailed Skolnick’s alleged crimes. He is accused of posing as a number
of teenage girls online in an effort to lure a 14-year-old boy into emailing
him nude photographs of himself. Skolnick also told the FBI that he had
requested explicit photos from 20 to 25 people, most of them children,
according to the complaint. The aliases he used were “Molly Dejmal,” “Tina
Warner” and “Anna Freed.”
The boy sent Skolnick approximately six photos before he
stopped, according to the complaint. Skolnick, using the same aliases, then
began to send the boy threatening text messages from a fake phone number.
The FBI says Skolnick admitted that he sent the messages in
question.
“As an associate principal of a Bronx private school, one of
Jonathan Skolnick’s primary responsibilities was the well-being and education
of students,” U.S. Attorney Geoffrey Berman said in a statement. “Instead,
Skolnick allegedly preyed on his underage victims in a heinous plot to fool
them into sending him nude photos of themselves.”
Skolnick is charged with one count each of production of
child pornography, receipt of child pornography, possession of child
pornography, child enticement and making
extortionate communications.
Both SAR and the Yeshivah of Flatbush have acknowledged that
Skolnick was on their faculty.
Krauss said in his email that SAR will make therapists
available to students and parents, and also will host an open
question-and-answer session with himself and an FBI representative.
Raymond Harari, the head of school at Flatbush, and Jeffrey
Rothman, its executive director, wrote in an email Monday to their school
community that they are “not aware of any inappropriate behavior” on Skolnick’s
part while he was at the Brooklyn school.
Krauss did not respond to an email request for comment.
Flatbush administrators declined to comment.
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