A YouTube personality was shot during an argument with a security guard while filming outside a Los Angeles synagogue and Jewish high school Thursday afternoon, according to police and footage posted to social media.

Police were responding to reports of a disturbance outside the Etz Jacob Congregation/Ohel Chana High School building in the 7600 block of Beverly Boulevard about 12:20 p.m. when they received reports of a shooting in the same area, said Sgt. Barry Montgomery, a spokesman for the Los Angeles Police Department.

The shooting victim, who identified herself as 45-year-old Zhoie Perez, was treated for a gunshot wound to the leg and released. Perez later limped out of the back of an LAPD cruiser and spoke with reporters near the scene, describing the injury as a “deep graze.”

Perez is a self-described “1st Amendment auditor” and posts videos to YouTube under the handle “Furry Potato.” The account, which has more than 17,000 subscribers, contains videos of Perez and others going to public places and testing the limits of their 1st Amendment rights. Perez, however, said she was not attempting to conduct an “audit” when the shooting took place.


“I was just filming the exterior of the synagogue here, and getting a lot of like, the architecture, and all that, and the guard came out and just started freaking out, started putting his hand on his gun,” Perez said.

Perez said she began livestreaming the incident after the guard drew his weapon. Video she posted to YouTube shows her standing a few feet away from the synagogue’s gate when the gunshot is fired. The guard appeared to have his gun pointed toward the ground.

The guard fired the shot from the synagogue’s property onto the public sidewalk, where Perez was standing, Montgomery said.

Detectives arrested the guard, identified as Edduin Zelayagrunfeld, 44, on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon, the LAPD said late Thursday.


Perez has not been accused of a crime.

Witnesses to the Fairfax neighborhood incident said they saw someone dressed in black and holding a camera arguing with a security guard who was standing behind a gated entrance to the synagogue.

“It just seemed like a situation that was escalating,” said an employee at the Adante coffee shop across the street.

After the shooting, a crowd started gathering and some helped the victim to wrap her leg, said the Adante employee, who would not give a name. In the video Perez posted to YouTube, the guard can be heard repeatedly yelling “get away” at Perez as passersby tend to her injury.


The guard repeatedly yelled that he had fired only a “warning shot.” Perez said he threatened to kill her after the initial shot was fired.

The security guard then points his finger at the victim and says, “This is a warning shot … you don’t try to break inside.”

Witnesses can be seen in the video helping to wrap the victim’s leg.

“I got all these cops with hands on me and I got shot,” she said.


A woman was treated after being shot by a security guard outside a Los Angeles synagogue Thursday. (Los Angeles Times)

A friend of Perez, who would identify herself only by her YouTube handle “Kattila The Hun,” said that the pair are activists “just trying to protect our 1st Amendment right to free press.”

“We simply stand and we go to various places whether they are law enforcement police departments, DEA, you name it. She came to the synagogue today,” she said.

The “Furry Potato Live” account has posted other livestream-style videos including one titled “Cop Watch LAPD,” where the camera person questions Los Angeles Police Department officers during what appears to be a traffic stop. Another video shows the YouTuber going inside the El Segundo Police Department and speaking with officers.


The “Furry Potato Live” account links to one on the crowdfunding website Patreon belonging to a user named Zhoie Perez who also uses the name Furry Potato.

On the website, Perez describes herself as a “YouTube creator that is passionate about the rights that we have as American Citizens. I create internet content that will hopefully educate people about their rights while holding police and government officials accountable to us. I strive to do this in a fun and entertaining fashion. The goal is to help sustain our rights that were given to us by our founding fathers!”