The welcome extradition from Israel of Malka Leifer - It’s a far cry from the “ingathering of exiles” that Moses or the rest of us had in mind.
MALKA LEIFER, surrounded by Israel Prison Service guards, covers her face in Jerusalem District Court
It appears that the extremely lengthy extradition saga of Malka Leifer
is finally coming to an end. On Tuesday, Israel’s Supreme Court
rejected an appeal by the accused pedophile against sending her packing
to Australia, where she is wanted on 74 counts of rape and sexual abuse.
Though she still has another chance to appeal after Justice Minister Avi Nissenkorn signed off on her extradition,
there is little chance that such a move would bear fruit at this point.
By now, Leifer’s lawyers have exhausted every avenue and used any lame
excuse to keep their client from being sent back to the scene of her
“alleged” crimes.
The
reason that “alleged” should be in quotation marks here is that one of
her defense team’s arguments over the past six years was that her sexual
relations with the girls in the Adass Israel School in Melbourne –
where she served as principal – were consensual. In other words, she
acknowledges that the sex took place.
Adding
insult to injury, one of her attorneys, Nick Kaufman, said, “It is
simply unreasonable that [the alleged victims] did not know what those
sexual acts were, and that they were not able to refuse.”
To
lend credence to his argument, he peculiarly quoted one witness who
stated, “I was afraid to say no. [Leifer] had a powerful personality. If
I hadn’t done what she wanted, she would have become angry with me.”
Kaufman argued – ridiculously – that this meant her fear had been “subjective,” as opposed to the result of an actual threat.
Not
only is the assertion of the students’ “consent” preposterous, but it’s
completely different from what Leifer claimed when the first complaint
surfaced in 2008. At the time, she not only denied the accusation, but
got huffy about how it would ruin her reputation.
Well,
she was right about that. But any damage to her name is well-deserved.
Someone who takes advantage of his or her position of authority to prey
on subordinates for sexual gratification warrants no sympathy.
Leifer’s
conduct – if an Australian court deems her guilty – was particularly
heinous, however. As headmistress of a religious school, which keeps
girls and boys completely separate and teaches the strictest
interpretation of Orthodox Judaism, she would have been able to groom
her victims without raising suspicion.
Indeed,
her womanhood would have given her an advantage in the context of her
job and within the wider hassidic community. Particularly being the
mother of eight children, her initial advances couldn’t possibly have
raised the slightest red flag among the girls in her “educational” care.
Nor
would the girls’ parents have considered any signs of affection on the
part of a female educator to be inappropriate, in the way that they
might have if Leifer had been a man. It is also unlikely that they would
have believed their daughters if any had thought or dared to tell.
This
is precisely how Leifer would have managed to get away with the alleged
abuse for at least five of the eight years that she was employed at the
school. It would have enabled her to pull the wool over the eyes of her
victims, at least eight of whom have come forward.
THE
FIRST of these, Dassi Erlich, revealed her story in 2007. After
marrying in 2006 and moving to Israel, Erlich experienced post-trauma
from the alleged abuse and sought therapy.
In
February 2008, her therapist took the issue seriously, and contacted a
colleague in Melbourne, who then spoke to a teacher at the school. That
teacher then confronted Leifer, who dismissed the idea that she had
crossed any boundaries with Erlich or anybody else. (As it happens,
Erlich’s two sisters were among Leifer’s other alleged victims.)
The
teacher also discussed the matter with senior Adass Israel rabbis and
representatives of the school board. The latter then held a meeting in
March 2008, during which they phoned Leifer to hear what she had to say.
Despite
her angry denial and righteous indignation, she, her husband and four
of her children were on a flight to Tel Aviv that very night. Their trip
was funded by members of the school board.
Clearly,
those paragons of religious virtue thought that helping a suspected sex
criminal abscond, rather than informing the Melbourne police, was
preferable to a public scandal. And this is how Leifer – a dual
Australian-Israeli citizen – ended up back in the Jewish state.
Meanwhile,
the Melbourne police conducted an investigation and issued a warrant
for her arrest. For the many years since then, Canberra has been
requesting that Israel extradite her to stand trial in Australia.
Leifer
was arrested in Israel in the summer of 2014 as part of an Interpol
operation, and placed under house arrest in Bnei Brak, where she was
living at the time. It was then that the circus of her extradition
hearings – and numerous postponements on the grounds of grave
“mental-health issues” – began to take place.
Astonishingly,
in 2016, the court not only bought her contention of being unfit to
stand trial and suspended her extradition hearings, but removed her
house-arrest restrictions, as well. This is when she moved to the
settlement of Emmanuel, where her husband, Rabbi Yaakov Leifer, heads
the Chust Hassidic community.
Unbeknownst
to Leifer, private investigators caught 200 hours of her on video going
about business as usual in Emmanuel, with no apparent incapacitation.
She was re-arrested by the Israel Police in February 2018 and detained
at the Neve Tirza Women’s Prison in Ramle.
But
not for long. A few weeks later, she was released into the custody of a
rabbi who later withdrew his support, and she was sent back to Neve
Tirza for the duration of the extradition proceedings.
Yet
again, she was given the benefit of the doubt, and sent for psychiatric
testing to determine whether she was fit for the hearings. In the
summer of 2019, a court-appointed medical committee came to the
conclusion that she had been faking a mental illness.
And
then came the coronavirus pandemic, which put a months-long halt on
non-urgent court sessions. So Leifer was off the hook once more, giving
her defense team additional time to invent pretexts to prevent her
extradition.
One
of these was the claim that their client would not be able to maintain
her ultra-Orthodox lifestyle in an Australian prison. Presumably, they
meant that she wouldn’t be treated to glatt kosher food in a jail Down
Under, not that she couldn’t engage in the activities she’s accused of
having perpetrated while heading an Orthodox school.
Thankfully,
in May, she was deemed fit to stand trial for her extradition, which
the Jerusalem District Court ordered in September. This week’s Supreme
Court decision sealed her fate, and let’s hope it’s once and for all.
Leifer’s
alleged victims aren’t the only ones heaving a sigh of relief after so
many years. Israelis and Australians of all stripes agree that it’s high
time she returned to Australia to face a jury of her peers.
What
most people also concur with is that Israel must not allow itself to
become a safe haven for Jews evading justice in the Diaspora, especially
where cases involving multiple counts of child sex abuse are concerned.
Leifer’s
long, drawn-out escape from Australian law enforcement is a stain on
the Israeli judicial system that no white-washing can erase. It also
serves as encouragement to others of her ilk.
It’s a far cry from the “ingathering of exiles” that Moses or the rest of us had in mind.
7 comments:
The gedolei Eretz Yisroel & virtually all talmidim of R' Aron Kotler, Brisker Rov, Chazon Ish, etc, say to protect against the virus, but the Agudah keep following Philly into deathly oblivion. Go figure
http://www.frumtoronto.com/Blogger.asp?BlogCategoryID=44&ShowEntryID=24034#Frum24034
זאת חנוכה תשע"א December 17, 2020
To the Members of the Community: The number of Covid-19 cases in the Greater Toronto Area has sky-rocketed over the past few weeks. As a result, both Toronto and York Region are under lockdown. Our community is not immune. Many people have tested positive for the virus and some of them are suffering terribly.
The Covid-19 pandemic is a genuine סכנה. Of course, having בטחון is essential and תפילה is our greatest weapon. However, the Torah tells us very clearly that in such a situation, ונשמרתם מאד לנפשותיכם. During this Pandemic, that means our השתדלות are to obey Health Care professionals and strictly comply with all Covid-19 restrictions and measures. These include wearing tight-fitting masks, social-distancing, limits on gatherings, etc. Every effort must be made to avoid both חילול השם, and the very real possibility of spreading the virus, ח"ו.
We all look forward to the day when this Pandemic is behind us and families and shuls return to their regular routines. For now, however, we must behave in a manner appropriate to these extraordinary and dangerous times.
BEIS DIN
Vaad Harabonim of Toronto
Rabbi Dovid Schochet (talmid of R' Aron Kotler)
Rabbi Moshe Mordechai Lowy
Rabbi Yosef Oziel
https://kollel.com/rabbi-yaakov-hirschman-on-the-corona-virus-%d7%99%d7%90-%d7%a0%d7%99%d7%a1%d7%9f-%d7%aa%d7%a9%d7%a4/
Rav Yaakov Hirschmann attacks Agudah style carelessness & their ridiculous lawsuits against Cuomo.
Talmid of R' Aron Kotler (& Torah Vodaas)
Mamash a tchikava zach!
A Bnei Brak resident who passed away earlier this month after contracting COVID-19 for the second time died of a different virus strain than he contracted the first time, Kan News reported.
Sheba Hospital in Tel HaShomer, where the man passed away, carried out genetic testing which showed that the man had contracted a different coronavirus variant than the first strain he contracted months earlier, from which he subsequently recovered.
“There’s no doubt that the man was infected twice and that he had recovered from the first infection,” Prof. Galia Rahav, head of the Infectious Disease Unit, told Ynet.
“It’s very worrying that a person can be infected a second time while the virus is mutating. What impact will this have on the coronavirus vaccine? Can people be infected multiple times?”
The report comes amid mounting international concern over new coronavirus variants found in the UK and other countries.
https://www.theyeshivaworld.com/news/featured/1930264/watch-sassover-rebbe-slams-covid-vaccine-calls-doctors-murderers.html
Is this the brother or half brother of your old "pal" the Kirhoizer Ruv?
So NOW they are desperate to prevent assaults on children. Which rabbi's son-in-law is the camera installation contractor?
https://web.archive.org/web/20201222131556/https://madmimi.com/p/af68b11
Is this the brother or half brother of your old "pal" the Kirhoizer Ruv?
*
Nuch a kapo..I don't know what the relationship to Kirhouzer "YMS" is.
The Sassover needs to tell us which medication Rav Elyashev was scared of. Maybe there was an equivalent available.
The Sassover doesn't even know what he's talking about! There is no live virus in the vaccine! He may have been duped by an anti-vaxx disinformation campaign to scare people over the RNA component that "enters cells" which would then tamper with DNA, when it does not in fact enter cells.
The Monsey Sassover is in fact a half brother of the alter Kirhauser!
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