NY Times When
several rabbis and ultra-Orthodox men were accused in October of being a
part of a ring that kidnapped and tortured Jewish husbands who refused
to grant divorces to their wives, the top federal prosecutor in New
Jersey said the number of victims might run into the dozens.
But
the authorities would not discuss any of those cases. Initially, the
charges against the accused kidnappers were based only on an F.B.I.
operation involving an undercover agent who posed as a wife wanting to
leave a deteriorating marriage. In headline-grabbing detail, court
papers described how the agent infiltrated a world of “special rabbis”
willing to authorize the torture of recalcitrant husbands until they
agreed to a divorce, which under Jewish law cannot occur without the
man’s consent.
On
Thursday afternoon, after months of investigation, an indictment was
unsealed in Trenton that bluntly detailed three actual kidnappings that
preceded the operation. The indictment charges five men, including the
accused ringleader who was arrested after the operation, Mendel Epstein,
of Brooklyn. Among the other defendants are one of his sons, David
Epstein; a rabbi who presides over a yeshiva in Monsey, N.Y., Martin
Wolmark; and two other men. [...]
What is new here? (Except for unnamed third case).
ReplyDeletePerhaps the third case was not noteworthy for nytimes. Copy of court papers, plz.
What about those that hired these thugs?
The court papers are available online on the Department of Justice website. A google search can produce them.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.justice.gov/usao/nj/Press/files/pdffiles/2014/Epstein,%20Mendel%20et%20al.%20Indictment.pdf
ReplyDelete