Legal Affairs
The indictment states that the 19-year-old tried to fight off her attacker, but he overcame her, assaulted her and stabbed her a number of times using the knife he had on his person. Ansbacher died as a result of her wounds.
Horrific new details of the brutal rape and slaughter of murdered teen Ori Ansbacher were revealed by alleged murderer Arafat Irfaiya, who admitted to purchasing a “kipah” ahead of his attack so he would be allowed entry to Israel by being mistaken for a Jew.
Robert Ilatov of the Yisrael Beytenu Party said in response, “Sadly, Israel, which is dealing with terrorists who are trying to attack it from outside, is also forced to deal with terrorists who are trying to attack it from inside the Knesset.”
Upon extracting Arafat Irfaiya from the site, forces were attacked by Arabs with Molotov cocktails, pipe bombs, stones and burning tires.
“I entered Israel with a knife because I wanted to become a martyr and murder a Jew,” 29-year-old Palestinian Arafat Irfaiya reportedly said. “I met the girl by chance.”
Use of the death penalty can only be made in specific circumstances and requires a unanimous decision from a panel of three judges.
Between August 1942 and July 1944, some 25,628 Jews and Gypsies from Belgium were deported from the Dossin barracks in Mechelen to the Auschwitz-Birkenau camps.
The court gave the order on behalf of terror victims who filed a civil-damages lawsuit against the Palestinian Authority and Arafat’s estate.
After 18 months of secret research, Israel is preparing to demand compensation for assets abandoned by Jews who were forced to flee eight Arab countries after the establishment of the Jewish nation.
The country will pay $2,800 each to survivors from among the 10,000 who fled the “Kindertransport,” which sent children from Germany to Great Britain as part of the latter agreeing to admit an unspecified number of Jewish children as refugees, beginning in 1938.
He was found to have placed approximately 2,000 threatening phone calls to Jewish schools and community centers in the United States from 2015 to 2017, as well as to airlines, airports, malls, police stations in America, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand.
Though Israel does allow for the death penalty, it was only used once—in 1962 for the execution of Nazi official Adolf Eichmann for his part in engineering the Holocaust.