As the case reemerged, court filings obtained by The Times of Israel showed that last December, an array of Jewish leaders signed a letter to New York Governor Kathy Hochul seeking a commutation for Weberman’s immediate release. The previously unreported letter was submitted to the court as a reference for resentencing in June, along with other letters of support from Weberman’s family and supporters.
The letter called Weberman’s sentence “absorbently excessive,” saying he had not incurred any infractions during his 12 years in prison and that his sentence was “much greater by comparison to others held guilty of a similar crime.”
The letter was signed by 13 prominent rabbis representing an array of Hasidic groups in New York City and a representative of Yeshiva University. The university did not reply to a request for comment.
> saying he had not incurred any infractions during his 12 years in prison
ReplyDeletePerhaps because there's no young women to beat and rape in prison? Perhaps because in prison he's suddenly not to biggest, strongest guy and, like a classic bully, he now keeps his head down out of self-preservation?
And commute his sentence? Reduce I could understand if not agree with but commute? Are they nuts?