New York – Pollard Set To Appeal Restrictive Parole Conditions In Hearing Next Week

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    FILE - Convicted Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard (C), who was released from a U.S. federal prison in North Carolina overnight, leaves U.S. District court with his wife, Elaine Zeitz, in the Manhattan borough of New York, November 20, 2015.REUTERSNew York – Freed Israeli agent Jonathan Pollard will ask a district court judge in New York next Wednesday morning to ease the conditions of his parole, a representative of Curtis, Mallet-Prevost, Colt & Mosle LLP, Pollard’s law firm, told The Jerusalem Post exclusively Thursday.

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    Pollard’s parole conditions require him to wear an electronic ankle bracelet at all times for GPS tracking of his whereabouts and to be subjected to unfettered monitoring and inspection of his computers and those of his employer. Not only can he not move to Israel as he desires, he cannot leave his home in New York City before 7 a.m. or come home after 7 p.m.

    The parole conditions have put in limbo an offer Pollard received to become a research analyst in the finance department of a respected investment firm. Pollard suffers from chronic leg and ankle swelling, which makes the ankle bracelet problematic to his health.

    The hours of his curfew makes it difficult to travel to and from work, to attend prayer services, or to accept invitations to dinner on the Sabbath and holidays from friends and relatives.

    Affidavits filed by Pollard pro-bono attorneys, Jacques Semmelman and Eliot Lauer, which were obtained by the haredi (ultra-Orthodox) newspaper Hamodia complain that the parole conditions are “guaranteed to deprive Mr. Pollard of his ability to observe the most basic tenets of his religion, Judaism.”

    The affidavits revealed that the GPS monitoring system consists of a non-removable transmitter, which is installed on Pollard’s wrist, and a receiver that is plugged into an outlet in his residence. Whenever he moves outside the range of the receiver, the transmitter – which is three inches long and two inches wide – acts as a GPS tracker and monitors his location.

    The transmitter – which Pollard must wear seven days a week – must be charged daily. When fully charged, it lasts for a minimum of 12 hours and up to a maximum of 20 hours; the battery drains faster while outside the range of the receiver.

    It takes about two hours to reach a full charge, and Mr. Pollard must sit in a stationary position for the entire time the device is recharging.

    The affidavit submitted from Pollard’s rabbi, National Council of Young Israel executive director emeritus Rabbi Pesach Lerner, explains that, according to Jewish law, one is prohibited from inserting an electrical plug into an outlet or removing one from an outlet on Shabbat.

    The rabbi wrote that Pollard is also prohibited by Jewish law from answering a phone on Shabbat, but is obligated under the conditions of parole to respond promptly to his probation officer’s phone calls monitoring his compliance.


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    3 Comments
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    soxfan
    soxfan
    8 years ago

    Was Pollard always so religiously observant? No.

    ralph1527
    ralph1527
    8 years ago

    This is what the Rambam is talking about when He describes a goyish gov’t …..The man paid for hiscrimes ….leave him be !!!!!

    ExpatriateOwl
    ExpatriateOwl
    8 years ago

    The restrictions effectively make him unemployable. Whose interests does this serve?