DORAL, Fla. – Police continue to investigate after a rabbi visiting from New York was shot and killed on his way to temple in northeast Miami-Dade County during the weekend.
Joseph Raksin was fatally shot as he was walking to a temple near Northeast 175th Street and Northeast Eighth Court. Miami-Dade police said they believe Raksin was shot during an attempted robbery.
"We're determined to get to the bottom of this case," Maj. Hector Llevat said during a Monday morning news conference.
Llevat reassured the public that the investigation of the rabbi's death will be thorough.
"We understand the grief, the anxiety and the anguish that comes from a cowardly act like this," Llevat said. "And we share in the community's urgency to find the perpetrators of this act."
Phineas Weberman, president of the Orthodox Rabbinical Council of South Florida, also spoke during Monday's news conference.
"We have confidence in the Miami-Dade Police Department," Weberman said.
His sentiments are a stark contrast to others in the neighborhood where the shooting took place. Some are even calling for the restructuring of the Miami-Dade Police Department's Intracoastal Division responsible for that neighborhood.
"Yes law enforcement has a greater responsibility to solve crimes and to prevent them from occurring, but we need the community as well," Maj. Saima Plasencia said.
Weberman said he doesn't see the shooting as a failure by police.
"Rather, in my opinion, (it is) that of a judicial system that is not strong enough," Weberman said.
No arrests have been made.
Although police haven't ruled the shooting a hate crime, they haven't ruled it out either.
Weberman said one thing is certain.
"He certainly didn't do it because he loved him," Weberman said.