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May 20, 2010

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Obama Signs Daniel Pearl Press Act

Los Angeles
JTA Wire Service

President Obama signed the Daniel Pearl Freedom of the Press Act, joined by six family members of the Wall Street Journal reporter slain by Islamic extremists.

The president said Monday morning that he was instructing the U.S. State Department to vigorously follow and report on violations of press freedom anywhere in the world, as provided in the act.

“This puts us clearly on the side of journalistic freedom,” Obama said.

Daniel Pearl was kidnapped and decapitated by terrorists in Pakistan in 2002 while investigating a story on the al-Qaida financial network.

Among those on hand for the 15-minute ceremony in the White House Oval Office was Pearl’s son, Adam, who received a yo-yo and M&M packet imprinted with the presidential seal. Adam, who will mark his eighth birthday later this month, was born three months after his father’s murder.

Other members of the family present were Pearl’s widow, Mariane; his parents, Judea and Ruth; and sisters Michelle and Tamara.

Obama praised the Pearl family for being so “outspoken and courageous,” adding that with the new law Daniel Pearl’s legacy lives on.

The new law mandates the State Department to identify countries in which there are violations of press freedom; determine whether the government authorities of those countries participate in, facilitate, or condone the violations; and report the actions such governments have taken to preserve the safety and independence of the media and ensure the prosecution of individuals who attack or murder journalists.

“This is a very significant and emotional event for us,” said Judea Pearl, a UCLA professor emeritus in computer science. “President Obama’s signature assures us that violators of press freedom throughout the world now know that they will be closely watched. That is something our son Danny fought for all his life.”

Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) and Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn), the House and Senate sponsors of the bill, participated in the ceremony.

Stolen Torah Scrolls Returned
  
Five Torah scrolls stolen from a Brooklyn synagogue were returned.

A person who said he knew the thieves brought the Torah scrolls, discovered stolen April 28 from the Khal Yirei Hashem Synagogue, also known as the Karlsburg Synagogue, in the Borough Park section to the office of Brooklyn’s district attorney on Sunday.

A reward of $10,000 had been offered for the return of the Torah scrolls, which are worth more than $30,000 each. Two silver crowns and breast plates also were reported missing.

The scrolls had been stolen from a safe with a combination lock and there was no sign of forced entry, leading police to investigate the theft as an inside job, the New York Daily News reported.

Museum Launches Fund to Honor Slain Guard

The U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum has established an endowment fund in memory of a security guard slain there.
 
Stephen Tyrone Johns was gunned down last June 10 by 88-year-old white supremacist James Wenneker von Brunn of Maryland during an attempted raid on the museum. Johns died from his injuries shortly after the attack.
 
To pay tribute to the officer, the museum has established the Stephen Tyrone Johns Summer Youth Leadership Program Endowment Fund. Under the program, 50 Washington-area teens will participate in a summer program to learn about the lessons of the Holocaust.
 
A fund established to assist the Johns family was closed last October.
 
Von Brunn was shot and critically wounded in the exchange of gunfire at the museum. He died Jan. 6 while awaiting trial in the case.

This story reprinted courtesy of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

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