Jewish Week On the eve of his scheduled trial date, prosecutors turned over to Sam
Kellner’s defense attorneys evidence that appears highly damaging to
Brooklyn District Attorney Charles Hynes’ case against the chasidic sex
abuse whistleblower, prompting his lawyers to call for an “outside
investigation.”
Kellner, a resident of Borough Park, is charged with paying a witness —
a man The Jewish Week refers to as a “Yoel” — to fabricate claims of
sexual abuse by Baruch Lebovits, a cantor and prominent member of the
Munkacs chasidic community. Kellner, whose son is also an alleged
Lebovits victim — and who brought additional Lebovits victims to the
police — is also charged with attempting to extort money from the
Lebovits family via emissaries sent to Lebovits’ son Meyer.
The evidence, which was turned over last Friday, three days before the
scheduled start of the trial on Monday, July 8, includes notes of
interviews prosecutors conducted with a key witness over the past two
weeks. In the interviews, Yoel made a series of inconsistent statements,
including some that directly contradict his grand jury testimony
against Kellner.
For example, while Yoel testified in the Kellner grand jury that he
knew Lebovits from synagogue, in a July 1 interview with Nicholas
Batsidis and Joseph Alexis, two assistant district attorneys, and
Rackets Division Chief Michael Vecchione, he claimed that he had “never
seen Baruch Lebovits in his life.”
In the same interview, Yoel also denied picking Lebovits out of a photo
array, which, along with Yoel’s statements to a detective, led to
Lebovits’ arrest. However, five days earlier, on June 26, he told
prosecutors that Lebovits “could have molested me. [I] can’t really
say.”
During the course of these interviews, Yoel also told prosecutors that
the reason he came forward with his allegations against Kellner was
because, according to their summary of the conversation, he had become
“disenchanted” with him after Kellner failed to pay him “a fee that the
two had agreed upon for his false testimony.” However, in the Kellner
grand jury, Yoel testified that Kellner gave him approximately $10,000
to testify against Lebovits.
All of the inconsistencies and contradictions in Yoel’s statements
seriously undermine the prosecution’s case against Kellner, experts say.
Sof davar HAKOL NISHMA, veHAEMES meEretz Titzmach, although for the time being, it is tief in der erd.
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