YNET The Jerusalem District
Court sentenced Binyamin Satz, a 46-year-old resident of Jerusalem, to
15 years in prison after he was found guilty of sodomy and indecent acts
against a number of haredi children, some as young as seven
Haaretz (January 2013) The Jerusalem District Court last week convicted the first man to be
tried among several defendants accused of sexually abusing children in
Jerusalem’s Nahlaot neighborhood, an affair police initially called the
biggest pedophile case in the state's history.
The
court convicted Binyamin Satz, who was the first of 18 men to be
arrested in the case that came to light in August, 2011. Two more men
are now on trial, and 15 others were released and have not yet been
charged in the affair that sent shock waves through the neighborhood
that is home to many ultra-Orthodox Jews.
The
judges found Satz guilty, but struck down his confession, which they
determined police had obtained through “unfair psychological pressure.”
Satz was acquitted of one of the counts in the indictment.
From the moment the case hit the headlines, neighborhood residents
and defense attorneys claimed that it was the result of a witch hunt and
mass hysteria, and that few if any children had been harmed.
According
to these sources, the case grew to such dimensions (at one point more
than 200 youngsters were said to have been abused) because of the
dynamics in the ultra-Orthodox neighborhood, in which stories were
magnified or even invented.
Those
who maintain the stories were exaggerated say false accusations were
leveled at the weakest people in the neighborhood – men living alone,
some of whom are psychologically impaired. In one case, a resident is
believed to have committed suicide because of the rumors that he was
involved in abusing the children. Others were forced to leave the
neighborhood and even the country.
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