Jerusalem – Court Denies Appeal by Charedi Extremist over Attack

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    VesifishJerusalem – Shmuel Veisfish, an activist in the extremist Sikrikim group, convicted for rioting, extortion, assault and grievous bodily harm.

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    The Supreme Court upheld the conviction of Shmuel Veisfish, an activist in the extremist Sikrikim group, who was sentenced by the Jerusalem District Court in January this year to two years imprisonment for rioting, extortion, assault and grievous bodily harm.

    Veisfish was convicted for his participation in the harassment and assault of the owner of the “Space” electronics store in the haredi neighborhood of Geula in Jerusalem in 2008, but lodged an appeal with the Supreme Court over the severity of his sentence.

    Veisfish, and other Sikrikim militants, had objected to the sale of portable video players in the store, which they claimed corrupted haredi youth. They arranged dozens of protests demanding that “Space” stop stocking such items and would drive customers out of the store and block the entrance. The group’s members also threatened to kill the employees and burn the store unless they stopped working there.

    During one of the protests Veisfish and another Sikrikim member, Ephraim Greenfield, dragged storeowner Binyamin Fredman out of the shop. Veisfish held Fredman from behind as Greenfield beat and punched him, breaking his nose. Fredman also sustained a broken finger and a cut lip.

    Supreme Court justices Miriam Naor, Salim Joubran and Yoram Danziger rejected Veisfish’s appeal, stating that the penalties imposed on Veisfish did indeed suit the gravity of the offenses.

    “The appellant took the liberty of imposing his opinions on others through violent means, enacted on an almost daily basis against the store, its employees and its customers,” read the verdict. “Such conduct undermines the foundations of our legal and democratic system.

    Yet sadly, it has spread into our society and become a real problem, which needs to be eliminated. Enforcement [of the law] in this issue is therefore very important.”

    When tried by the Jerusalem District Court, Veisfish denied all charges leveled against him, claiming that he had not committed them. The judge rejected these claims, convicted him of the offenses attributed to him, and sentenced him to two years imprisonment and a sixmonth suspended sentence.

    He was also given a NIS 5,000 fine and ordered to pay Fredman NIS 50,000 in compensation.

    During the appeal, Veisfish did not deny that he had committed the various offenses he was convicted of, but disputed some of the details. He claimed that he had not dragged Fredman out of the store, but that he had exited it of his own accord, and argued that he had held Fredman for only 20-25 seconds while Greenfield beat him, and not an entire minute, for which the Jerusalem District Court had convicted him.

    Veisfish also requested a more lenient sentence in light of his clean criminal record before the incident, the fact that he had not participated in any similar events or protests, the difficulties he would face in prison as a member of the haredi community, and the financial and family difficulties that would be caused by a lengthy prison sentence.

    The Supreme Court justices rejected most of Veisfish’s claims, although they agreed that Fredman had left the store of his own accord, in an attempt to chase Greenfield from the shop, and that Veisfish had held on to Fredman for only 20-25 seconds.

    Despite this, the court ruled that the sentence he received was appropriate for the offenses he committed, and that his personal and family circumstances had already been taken into consideration and had led to a more moderate sentence then would have otherwise been imposed. The court therefore stated that it saw no reason to intervene and reduce the sentence.

    “The penalties imposed, especially with regard to the charge of grievous bodily harm, are appropriate to the seriousness of the offenses and it is in the public interest that there is a [sufficient] deterrent,” the justices ruled.

    Shmuel Poppenheim, an unofficial spokesman for the haredi community said that “95 percent of residents in Geula and Mea She’arim are against the violence of the Sikrikim, and completely support the punishment of those who carry out violent attacks.

    No one disputes that they should pay for what they do.”

    He added however that those living in the neighborhood still want to preserve its conservative and haredi character, and will even tolerate the “exaggerated” steps of radical elements, as long as they are not carried out with violence.

    There is little real opposition to the activities of the Sikrikim, he said.

    “Most people are too busy learning, or attending to their families to have time to go to protests against these people.

    Even if they don’t agree with them, they don’t want to deal with the issue as long as it doesn’t affect them. It’s a combination of apathy and also a fear of confronting these violent people.”

    Of the Sikrikim themselves, Poppenheim labeled them “batlanim” or loafers who are not do particularly suited to studying in yeshiva.

    “They learn in kollel because its simply the thing to do after you get married, it’s the mainstream, not because they are particularly passionate about it. It’s an unhealthy phenomenon.

    “They don’t really have any desire to learn but they don’t think of doing anything else, and are not really equipped to do anything else either.”

    Content is provided courtesy of the Jerusalem Post


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    26 Comments
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    12 years ago

    I don’t understand how they could claim a sentence of only 2 years is excessive when we give a 25 year sentence here in the U.S. for a chareidi who was guilty of bank fraud and theft but not of physicial violence against other yidden.

    12 years ago

    Yes it is wrong to beat someone up for selling video players in Geula.Yes it is not the yiddish way to be mocha against such a thing. However, it is also wrong to sell those camera’s in Geula.Meah Shearim and Geula is suppose to be the most ehrlich and kodosh society. They are there because they want to be insulated from all the shmutz and goyasha ideals. This Yishuv has benn like that for over a century.They live on a higher plane. We must respect and show sensitivity to their standards.If someone were to open a porn shop in middle of Flatbush or BP there would be a huge outcry. The same goes for mewah Shearim. It’s time us Americans show a little sensitivity to their beliefs.

    noahz6
    noahz6
    12 years ago

    show me one place in the world where heimishe decide for you what yiddishkeit is and people aren’t offended by it.
    do you really want the sikrikin or any other group to decide what a store may sell.
    as long as they don’t offend you mind your own business.

    MayerAlter
    MayerAlter
    12 years ago

    Two years with only six months suspended sentence is a joke, as is the mere NIS 50,000 [$13,500] compensation order. This was a severe assault. Five years in jail followed by another five years suspended together with a serious compensation order of say NIS 250,000, was what was called for. Why didn’t the prosecution appeal the gross leniency of the sentence?
    Edit Reply

    MayerAlter
    MayerAlter
    12 years ago

    Why is it wrong to sell portable video players? If I want to show the video taken of the Mitzva Tanz at my children’s chassenes, what am I supposed to show it on? Banning everything just because it has the ability , if used improperly, to cause harm is not the answer. A video machine is an inanimate object. If the operator causes harm he needs to be educated. If someone commits traffic violations we don’t torch the car showroom, we give the driver a re-education course in safe driving. Many of the kids who hang around Geula are there because they have revolted against the “everything is assur” culture of today. They couldn’t make it in Yeshiva but it is assur to learn a trade. What do they do, they hang around which they are then told is also wrong. At some point the thread tears and they go off the derech completely. And who is to blame? The baal teshuva movement is one of the greatest spiritual achievements of our generation. The yerida movement, which is much much greater than anyone in the Haredi world cares to admit, is our greatest failure. A video machine is the least of our tzorrus.

    shredready
    shredready
    12 years ago

    “the difficulties he would face in prison as a member of the haredi community, and the financial and family difficulties that would be caused by a lengthy prison sentence.”

    this is a joke or what he wants less time because he is frum what chuzpha

    financial difficulties, again self centered what does he think no one else has families only herediem

    MayerAlter
    MayerAlter
    12 years ago

    Interesting what # YJay1 says “if the inhabitants of Me’ah She’arim don’t want these items being sold in their neighborhood (a fact: most don’t)” Who says they don’t? The store in question has been doing business in Geula, at the end of the neighborhood abutting Meah Shearim, for years. You don’t stay in business and do well if you either don’t sell what your customers want or, on the other side of the coin, sell what they don’t want. Many people, even Haredim, have a very rosy tinted idea of who and what Meah Shearim and its people are. Video players are amongst the least spiritually threatening items freely available for purchase in Geula and Meah Shearim.

    Yeshivish
    Yeshivish
    12 years ago

    Violence is never ok and always unacceptable. One small ”twist” in this story that changes whole picture:
    Dozens of Jerusalem people went to protest outside this store for bringing into their neighborhood technology gadgets that was’nt available in that area before (not arguing if protest was right or wrong, whether its freedom of speech or not), the owners of the store decided that police is not doing enough to boost his business driven off by protests, so he & his employess started taking matters in their own hands, starting with spraying water and eggs on demonstrators, they quickly started using their fists, and thats when some protesters started resisting, BTW, his finger broke while he was blowing puches at the crowd.
    p.s. as per eye witnesses, this Veisfish was no more than a regular demonstrator, they used him as scape goat to stop the protesting.

    samklein30
    samklein30
    12 years ago

    fix yourself before you fix others.