GOSHEN - The swastikas and words spray-painted at the Beth Shalom Cemetery were more than vandalism, they were a sacrilege committed against hallowed ground and an act of hate, members of the Jewish community said Wednesday in Orange County Court.

They spoke at the sentencing of Eric Carbonaro, 19, of Warwick, before the judge sentenced him to jail plus probation. Carbonaro pleaded guilty in February to two felonies in connection with the vandalism committed between Oct. 8-9, 2016 at Beth Shalom Cemetery in the Town of Warwick: tampering with physical evidence, and fifth-degree conspiracy as to commit criminal mischief as a hate crime.

At his February guilty plea, Carbonaro admitted that in September and October 2016 he discussed spray-painting graffiti at the Jewish cemetery, and to defacing the cemetery gates with swastikas and “Heil Hitler” graffiti. He admitted telling a friend to delete texts between them about the graffiti.

Judge Craig Brown sentenced Carbonaro to Orange County Jail through Aug. 30, essentially the same amount of time he’d serve if the judge gave him the 6-month jail sentence prosecutors recommended. Carbonaro will then be on probation, returning to court on Feb. 19, 2019, by which time he must complete 150 hours of community service in Orange County.

On Wednesday afternoon, dozens of members of the Temple Beth Shalom congregation arrived early for court. Read more at recordonline.com