Adass Israel School sex abuse scandal

The Adass Israel School sex abuse scandal is a criminal case and extradition dispute regarding allegations of child sex abuse at a religious school in Melbourne, Australia. Victoria Police have laid 74 charges against a former principal, Malka Leifer, concerning conduct from 2003 to 2008. At least eight victims have come forward, and an investigation is ongoing.[1] Leifer, a dual Israeli-Australian citizen,[2] fled under suspicious circumstances shortly before a warrant could be issued, and she has remained in Israel and the West Bank since 2008, under varying levels of police and court supervision, pending the resolution of her extradition case.[3] Allegations of further victims in the West Bank were made in June 2018.[1]

The Jerusalem District Court, where proceedings related to the Leifer case have been held

The degree of freedom she has enjoyed in Israel has prompted worldwide media coverage and criticism of Israel's justice system;[4][5] activist Manny Waks described the case as "a farce"[6] and "an embarrassment".[7] Leifer lived an apparently normal life for some time in the Israeli settlement of Emmanuel, despite a court ruling that she was mentally unfit for proceedings.[8][9] Though she was eventually jailed after media and police scrutiny of her behavior, as of July 2019, despite more than 50 court hearings[4] she has not been extradited.

In 2015, the Supreme Court of Victoria awarded over AU$1 million against the school, and also $150,000 exemplary damages personally against Leifer. Australian police confirm there is an ongoing investigation into the actions of some members of the Adass Israel community in helping her leave Australia.[10] Israeli police have likewise opened an investigation into officials, including former Minister of Health Yaakov Litzman, who may have interfered with Leifer's case.[11]

Background

The Adass Israel community is a Hasidic Jewish group in Melbourne that traces its origins to a split in the Elwood Shule in the early 1940s; some of its early members were boys and men who had been sent to Australia by the British on the infamous Dunera in 1941.[12] The community's synagogue is in Ripponlea, and its school and chevra kadisha (Jewish funeral society) are located in nearby Elsternwick.

The community is "ultra-Orthodox".[2][13] Children are raised without television, internet, radio, but have access to Jewish newspapers or magazines that cover worldly matters.[2] After the age of eight, boys and girls are kept entirely separate outside family homes, and the stories they are told never involve friendships between boys and girls. There is no sex education in schools but before marriage the bride and groom attend educational classes to discuss sex and other topics about marriage. The Rabbi of the community acts as the ultimate authority for members.[14]

Allegations of abuse

In 2007, a woman in Israel, Dassi Erlich,[note 1] sought counseling when she started to have recurrent nightmares and anxiety about events that had taken place at Adass Israel School when she was in high school.[3][2] These incidents allegedly happened at the hands of Leifer, the principal of the school. After an arranged marriage in 2006, Erlich had moved to Israel with her husband.[2][16]:73 In February 2008, Erlich's therapist in Israel contacted a psychologist in Melbourne, who, in turn, contacted a senior teacher she knew at the school. The information passed on is that there were substantial allegations of "inappropriate conduct" by Leifer.[2][13][16]:41,44 The teacher phoned Erlich, and was convinced of the claims that there had been "clearly sexualised behaviour" by Leifer and that "important boundaries had been crossed".[16]:44

The teacher then confronted Leifer who denied that there was any problem and subsequently reported the matter to two senior rabbis and with other rabbis, a barrister and a psychologist. There was a meeting arranged with the president and some members of the school board. Leifer was telephoned at the meeting and denied the allegations, saying: "You have destroyed my reputation. I'm not going to stand for this."[2]

Extradition case

The evening that the allegations came to light, in March 2008, the wife of a school board member rang a travel agent to say a flight to Israel was needed urgently. The school arranged, paid and booked tickets for Leifer and four of her eight children on an aircraft that departed at 1:20 am the same night, without having informed the police.[2] The police later investigated the school.[17] Leifer's husband, Rabbi Yaakov Yosef (Jacob) Leifer, also fled to Israel with her, where he now heads the small Chust Hassidic community in Emmanuel where he and his wife have been living since 2016.[18] In June 2018, Emmanuel was cited as a "haven for paedophiles" by The Sydney Morning Herald, which exposed further alleged child sexual abuse there by Leifer, committed "without consequence."[1]

Following investigations by the police, a warrant was issued for 74 child sex offences concerning at least eight pupils, and an extradition request was placed with Israel. Leifer was then arrested in Israel in August 2014,[13][10] and placed under house arrest in Bnei Brak where she was required to wear an electronic tag.[2]

At the extradition hearings, Leifer claimed that she suffered extreme anxiety and panic attacks in the lead up to the hearing, and she received a delay; she has since deferred the hearings numerous times claiming mental health issues, with one judge suggesting that the case could potentially be delayed up to a decade.[2][13][19] In June 2016 an Israeli court suspended Leifer's extradition hearings and home detention altogether, requiring only six-monthly psychiatric reviews to determine whether she could attend court in Israel.[15][20]

In February 2018, Leifer was arrested by Israeli police after an investigation into whether she had systematically feigned mental illness to avoid extradition.[21] The police investigation followed revelations by private investigators who captured over 200 hours of video of Leifer showing her leading a normal life, even though her defense team claimed that she was incapacitated due to her illness.[22] Her legal team claimed that the arrest and the re-opening of the case was due to political pressure from Australia, and not a legal matter.[23] A new assessment has shown her fit to stand trial in Australia, but the extradition has been held back temporarily to allow her legal team to review the new information. She is being kept in detention rather than house arrest.[24]

Rosenbaum Communications public relations firm owner Ronen Tzur led a strategic smear campaign to block Leifer's extradition.[25] Subsequent to exposure of the project by the Yedioth Ahronoth, Leifer cut ties with Tzur, with her attorney, Yehuda Freid, calling the campaign “inappropriate”.[26]

On 7 March 2018, the judge ruled that Leifer was to be released, while further investigation was to take place. She was released into the custody of Rabbi Yitzchak Dovid Grossman, who had given testimony in her favor, claiming it was a "humiliation" for her to remain in custody.[27] In 2016, Grossman had also twice appeared before a court in South Africa to negotiate the release from prison of former Shuvu Banim Torah Academy school dean Rabbi Eliezer Berland, who later confessed to rape and assault.[28][29][30][31] Grossman soon withdrew his support,[32] and Leifer was ordered held in Israel's only women's prison until extradition proceedings are complete.[33][34] The Jerusalem District Court then remanded the alleged perpetrator and ordered a second round of psychiatric testing to see she is fit to stand trial for extradition.[35] The court's medical committee returned its ruling in July 2019, finding that the accused had faked mental illness to elude extradition.[36]

On 15 March 2020 Justice Minister Amir Ohana announced that non-urgent court activity would be frozen due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[37]

On 26 May 2020, the Israeli Court held that Leifer was fit to stand trial for extradition to Australia. The Court rejected Leifer’s claim of mental illness that she has been asserting since extradition proceedings were initiated in 2014.[38]

Dassi Erlich and civil case

One of the alleged victims of the case, Dassi Erlich came out publicly in March 2017, and began campaigning for the extradition and changes in the Adass community.[15]

In 2015, prior to the public revelation of her name, Erlich sued the school in a civil case. In September 2015, after the school had refused to settle out of court, a civil case in the Supreme Court of Victoria in Melbourne[16] awarded Erlich $1.27 million in damages against the Adass Israel School and the alleged perpetrator.[2][13][15]

As part of her evidence, Erlich described the extreme sexual naivety of the children in the community, and how that was used against her, even being unaware of the most basic elements of relationships and any sexual activity.[2] This continued through high school, and after when Erlich was given a job at the school, where the abuse continued.[39]

The judge Jack Rush said "that the sexual abuse occurred under the guise of Jewish education by the headmistress of the school makes the breach of trust associated with the abuse monstrous. The evidence discloses the sole motivation of the suspect in her dealings with the plaintiff was her own sexual gratification." He described the breach of trust as evil, and ordered the perpetrator to personally pay $150,000 exemplary damages[note 2] to Erlich.[2][16]:223

Justice Rush said that, at the time Leifer had left, the president of the school board knew of eight additional allegations of sexual abuse on other girls. The school had had an obligation to report the matters to the police before arranging her departure. He rejected the school's argument that it had been a legal obligation to pay her air fares. The school argued that it was not liable because it was the congregation, not the school, that was the employer, but the judge also rejected this.[2]

Two of Erlich's sisters, Ellie Sapper and Nicole Meyer, who had also been abused, received out of court settlements from the school independent of this case.[15]

Erlich has since remained in the public eye, campaigning for the return of Leifer, and for abuse survivors, including meeting with many communal leaders and politicians.[15] Her coming forward to the secular authorities have made her a traitor in the eyes of some in her community, which she has subsequently left.[40]

Aftermath

Meir Shlomo Kluwgant was appointed principal of Adass Israel school in June 2017. There was significant anger in the community with the appointment, because of Kluwgant's role in the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.[41] In February 2015, he stepped down from his numerous communal posts at the time because of his response to the evidence of the father of a sexual abuse victim at another ultra-Orthodox school in Melbourne. He had sent a text message to the editor of the Australian Jewish News, accusing the father of being a "a lunatic on the fringe, guilty of neglecting his own children". The father's evidence had been that his family had been targeted and ostracised by religious leaders when he had gone public with his allegations.[42]

The Victorian minister of education said he understood the concern and asked for an explanation from the school. The head of Adass Israel, Rabbi Zvi Beck asked for further consultation on the appointment. In August 2017, Kluwgant resigned from the school.[43]

In 2018 Kluwgant commenced an action for defamation against a spokesman for the victims at the school who, he claimed, had contacted the school when his pending appointment was announced, to say he was "the scum of the earth" and later to call for him to be dismissed.[44]

Political interventions

In October 2017 Erlich and two of her sisters went to Israel to campaign for Leifer's extradition, meeting the Minister of Justice, the senior prosecutor in the department of international affairs and members of the Knesset.[45] The following month the Australian prime minister Malcolm Turnbull met his Israeli counterpart, Benjamin Netanyahu and raised the matter of the delayed extradition with him.[46]

Two successive premiers of Victoria have been supporting the efforts to extradite Leifer. Ted Baillieu has supported the family, and helped set up the meeting between Malcolm Turnbull and Erlich, Sapper and Meyer.[47] Baillieu also accompanied the sisters to Israel to meet with officials there.[48] Daniel Andrews, also raised the case with Netanyahu who said he will have a fresh look at the situation.[49]

David Southwick, who represents the electorate of Caulfield, where the school is located, presented a petition of 17,000 signatures which he delivered in July 2017 to lawmakers in Israel.[50]

Federally, the extradition of Leifer remains a bi-partisan issue, with Mark Dreyfus confirming that Labor would continue to pressure for her to face justice in Australia.[51]

Members of the Jewish community have also called for the extradition.[52] Israeli victim advocates and assault survivors rallied outside the Jerusalem District Court in March 2019, calling for Leifer to be deported.[53]

In February 2019, it was revealed that the Israel's deputy health minister, Yaakov Litzman, was questioned by police on the suspicion that he had been using his position to prevent the extradition.[11] It was alleged that Litzman pressured doctors to falsify psychiatric evaluations that deem Leifer unfit to stand trial, therefore preventing her extradition.[54][55] Litzman claimed that everything he did was legal, and that he was acting "for the good of the public", but Litzman is a Ger Hassid, and it was revealed that Leifer had previously held a position at a school run by that ultra-Orthodox group.[56]

See also

Notes

  1. Earlier news reports did not name the individual but in March 2017 she decided to come forward and her name was widely published.[15]
  2. "Exemplary damages are damages over and above those necessary to compensate the plaintiff. They are awarded to punish the defendant. They are intended to act as a deterrent to the defendant, and to others minded to behave in a like manner. They are also intended to demonstrate the court's disapprobation and denunciation of such conduct."[16]:208

References

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