Police recommend indicting Litzman for aiding alleged pedophile
After the police recommendation, a statement was released on Tuesday by Litzman’s office saying that, “Minister Litzman has worked throughout his years for the benefit of Israeli citizens, with complete transparency and by law. The office of Litzman has a clear, open-door policy to assist the public. This is without discrimination against anyone, and without clarifying the status of those who call for assistance, except under the law and [with] integrity.”
The statement continued: “The police statement also clearly shows that the police also believe that no offense was committed in most of the suspicions about which Deputy Minister Litzman was interrogated. Regarding the other allegations, we are unquestionably confident that, upon close examination, it will be revealed that no crime was committed by the Deputy Minister.”
Deputy Minister of Education Rabbi Meir Porush also released a statement on Tuesday morning, saying that, “It is very serious that legitimate and demanding activities of a public envoy in the context of public inquiries – and helping the citizen with complex bureaucratic systems – constitute a basis for investigations.”
Activist groups combating sexual abuse in the Jewish community in Israel and abroad immediately called for Litzman to resign.
“It is deeply disappointing and angering that someone of the stature of Deputy Minister Yaakov Litzman allegedly used the power of his position to help scores of child rapists, and we hope the police recommendation is a step toward him facing justice,” said Meyer Seewald, Founder and Director of Jewish Community Watch.
It was a private investigation by JCW in 2017 demonstrating that Leifer was ostensibly functioning normally in her daily life in the Emanuel settlement, which led to a renewed police investigation and her eventual arrest in February 2018.
“Our private investigation in 2017 only clarified what was obvious to so many: that Malka Leifer was feigning mental illness to avoid extradition,” said Seewald, adding that it was “apparent that Leifer was being protected by very influential people” and that the police charges demonstrate that it was Litzman who was assisting her.
The Kol V’Oz organization also called for Litzman to resign in light of the police’s recommendation to indict him, saying that the “prolonged, sordid case” involving Leifer had damaged Israel’s global reputation.
“It seems the truth is slowly coming to light: an alleged interference at the highest level [by] Israel’s ultra-Orthodox Deputy Health Minister,” said Manny Waks, director of the group.
“Those of us who have been following this case closely over the years have always wondered how it reached this level of farce,” he added. “There have been over 50 court hearings, with no end in sight.”
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