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A 75-year-old man who admitted to a months-long campaign of antisemitic vandalism across Montauk ultimately avoided serving any of the five-day jail sentence he received, the New York Post reported Tuesday night.

Michael Nicholoulias confessed to spray-painting swastikas and messages including “Jews Die” and “Jews Burn” on homes, businesses, and public property between October and December 2023. He was arrested and, on Nov. 14, a judge handed down a five-day Suffolk County jail sentence, 27East reported.

“I am guilty of everything,” Nicholoulias told prosecutors, according to the outlet.

Nicholoulias pleaded guilty in August to two felony hate-crime charges as part of a plea agreement with Suffolk County District Attorney Ray Tierney. But despite the imposed sentence, he did not serve a single day of it. The report said he was credited with “good behavior” for the one day he had previously spent in custody after his arrest, leaving him with probation instead of jail time.

Investigators identified Nicholoulias by tracking the GPS tag placed on his 2004 Chrysler PT Cruiser. Police later caught him in the act on Dec. 4 near Ditch Plains, where he was found spray-painting a swastika on a bench by the public restrooms. Other nearby signs had been defaced in the same manner.

In court, Nicholoulias admitted he specifically targeted properties because their owners were Jewish, the report said.

Following sentencing, jail officials processed him for the short term, but because he was due to receive time off for “good behavior” within days, and because the sentencing occurred on a Friday, a procedural technicality effectively erased the entire five-day term.