How the Abergil Brothers Built Israel’s Most Feared Empire

How the Abergil Brothers Built Israel’s Most Feared Empire 

It’s a summer night in Lod, 1981. A two-room apartment on the ground floor of a Binyan Rechevet, one of those long, low, boxcar-shaped public housing blocks the Israeli government  threw up in the peripheral cities when they emptied the transit camps and had nowhere cheaper to put the new immigrants.

 Nine bodies  sleep inside it. A father on disability, a mother who hasn’t come home yet.  She won’t until 1:00 in the morning because she’s working her third job of the day washing  dishes at a banquet hall across town. And seven children stacked into the rooms like cargo. >>  >> Under the building, in the bomb shelter, a 12-year-old boy is awake.

 On the concrete floor  in front of him, two pistols, identical, hidden  here because there’s nowhere safer in the apartment. He reaches into his  pocket, takes out a pen, and draws a small circle on the grip of one of them. His older brother, >>  >> Yaakov’s. He doesn’t want to confuse who is whose.

40 years  from now, that boy will order a bomb in Tel Aviv that kills three strangers on a sidewalk. He will become the first Israeli  citizen ever extradited to the United States under a brand new racketeering treaty that the Knesset wrote in part to be able to catch him. He will learn to read  at age 19 from one of the old gangsters in Ayalon prison.

>>  >> And the book that will slap him across the face and rearrange his entire understanding of the world will be Ayn Rand’s  The Fountainhead. The boy’s name is Yitzhak Abergil. He is one of 10 children. He sleeps above a pistol because there’s no other place to keep one. And everyone in Lod already knows his family.

 You already know the story in the shape it usually comes in. Israeli mafia, ecstasy, 75% of the American supply, a war with a rival named Zeev Rosenstein,  a bomb on Yehuda Halevi Street, a plane to Los Angeles in chains. That’s the Wikipedia version, and it’s mostly correct, and it misses almost everything that matters.

 What the Wikipedia version doesn’t tell you is that  this empire wasn’t built by a criminal mastermind who read Machiavelli. It was built by a kid who didn’t learn to read at all until he was a grown man locked up for murder. >>  >> And the book that made him who he became is one your MBA friends quote at dinner parties.

 It doesn’t tell you that the Israeli state had no legal category called criminal organization until 2003, no federal-level police unit to prosecute one until January 1st, 2008, and no legal mechanism to extradite its own citizens until a completely unrelated case involving an American teenager forced the Knesset to rewrite the extradition law in 1999.

  The Abergil empire rose in the exact gap where those tools didn’t exist yet. When they finally did, the empire fell in 3 years. Nobody inside Israeli law enforcement will tell you on camera that this is the shape of the story, but it is. So, here’s what this one is about. Three things. How a Moroccan Jewish slum in the peripheral city of Lod produced a 12-year-old who slept above a pistol and became the man Israeli prosecutors would eventually call number one.

How an empire that moved tens of millions of dollars worth of ecstasy reached from clandestine labs in the Dutch-Belgian border towns >>  >> into a parking lot in the San Fernando Valley on an August night in 2003. And how a state  without tools, over 25 years, finally built the apparatus to break one of its own citizens.

  And why the man who survived all of it is now described by someone who still speaks to him as penniless, tired, and exhausted. Lod, 1970. The Abergils arrive as Olim Chadashim from Morocco, new immigrants with 10 children and almost nothing. The father, Shalom, is an alcoholic on a disability pension. The mother, known to her family as Juju,  works as a domestic worker cleaning houses by day and washing dishes at a banquet hall by night.

Yitzhak will testify years later in open court that she didn’t come home until 1:00 in the morning. They are assigned a two-room apartment in a neighborhood called Rasco, which bleeds directly into another called Beneat. Both are populated by families just like theirs, Olim from Morocco, Iraq, Yemen, who were first put in the transit camps, the Ma’abara Road, and then, when the land elsewhere got too expensive, dumped into these long, low, train-shaped housing blocks, Binyan Rechevet, boxcar buildings, two rooms each,

seven children per family, not counting the parents. That’s not a figure Yitzhak would later embellish. That’s what he said on the stand. And Lod itself, in the late 1970s, is unlike  anywhere else in Israel. Yitzhak’s own line on it, decades later. I think we were the only city in Israel that had a curfew for Jews.

 There was no such thing as seeing a cop car and not  running. Of the 10 Abergil children, six are boys. Yaakov is the eldest, the one who will found the organization. Meir is older than Yitzhak by about 11 years. He will become the money manager, the one in the blue shirt who slips into a black Mercedes on Dizengoff Street.

There’s Yaish, and there’s Eli, and there’s Ibi, short for Avraham, who is already a heroin addict and in and out of prison by the time Yitzhak is old enough to remember him. And  then, Yitzhak, the Benz Kounen, the baby of the family, born February 14th, 1969. When Yitzhak is 11, he starts stealing from cars and breaking into houses.

 At 12, he brings a gun to school and fires it in the yard, aimed at classmates, and is expelled. At 13, he walks up to a 33-year-old youth counselor named Hanania Amar at a party. The counselor has refused him entry because he’s wearing shorts and shoots him in the leg. At 14, he is running a drug house with Ibi, hashish and what the Israeli street calls Persian coke, heroin.

At 15, he opens a second drug house in Haifa and a third in Eilat. At 17, Yitzhak Abergil kills a 35-year-old pimp named Yaakov Cohen. He doesn’t fight it in court. He pleads guilty and is sentenced  to 30 years with 12 suspended. And here is where the story turns and where nothing you’ve read about him will have prepared you for what happens next.

 And I’ll get to that old gangster in Ayalon in a minute. Because the received wisdom about organized crime bosses is that they come up through a kind of rough  apprenticeship on the street, and they never pick up a book. That’s the assumption. It’s so embedded, you don’t even notice it. It’s in every movie. Goodfellas, Gomorrah, every prestige TV image we have. That’s not what happened.

Yitzhak Abergil walked into Ayalon prison in Ramle at 18, illiterate. He could not read. And the veteran Israeli gangster, Shmaya Angel, a name that in Israeli organized crime at the time meant something close to legend, took him aside and taught him how. Yitzhak’s first book was Hermann Hesse’s  Narcissus and Goldmund.

He would say later  that it was a nice book, but it didn’t do anything to him. Then his attorney, a man named Svika Avnon, handed him The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand. And this is how Yitzhak, on the record, described what happened. It slapped me in the face as if it shattered the way of life in which I believed.

 He went from there to Atlas Shrugged, then to  Nietzsche’s Thus Spoke Zarathustra. By the time he came out of prison in  the 1990s, he had read more serious philosophy than most of the Israeli journalists who would later cover him. His attorney, Avnon, who gave him the books, said this about him on the record to a journalist named Ben Hartman.

If he’d been fortunate enough to be born in Ramat Aviv and study at the Alliance, >>  >> it could be that he would have been prime minister. Ramat Aviv is the wealthy Tel Aviv neighborhood. The Alliance is the elite French-Jewish school system. Avnon called Yitzhak, without qualification, a brilliant, brilliant man, a born leader of men.

And then Avnon, who had read the same books Yitzhak had read, >>  >> had to watch his client use that mind to build what he built. By the late 1990s, Yitzhak was out. Yaakov, the eldest brother, is running the organization from Lod. Meir is managing money. The machine is small and regional, focused on gambling, protection, collections, and currency  exchange.

 Then, in 2002, a sitting Iraqi Jewish crime boss named Yechezkel Aseelan, the king of the Hatikva quarter in Tel Aviv, is murdered. Ze’ev Rosenstein moves into the vacuum, and the Abergils, from their base in peripheral Lod, move in the opposite direction. They consolidate outward, not inward. They take over the gray market currency changers.

 They buy into the underground gambling circuit, and they inherit a 400 million shekel debt from a man named Ofer Maximov, a debt Maximov can’t pay because the money came from his own sister, Etti Alon, who was the deputy director of the investment department at the Israel Trade Bank, and who had embezzled it out of the vault to cover his losses.

 The Abergils take the debt and turn it into a money laundering pipeline, routing tens of millions of US dollars through loans to Israeli-American business people in Los Angeles and Miami, loans they fully intend to call in at multiples later. By 2004, the Israeli police have compiled a list of the organization’s assets.  37 companies, 48 apartments, 56 cars, most of them luxury vehicles, some of them watercraft.

And Meir, the quiet one, the family man with four kids on a moshav, a Tel Aviv journalist once watched him for an afternoon. He sat at a bus stop chatting with a middle-aged American in a blue shirt, relaxed, unhurried. Then he stood up, walked half a block, got into a black Mercedes, and drove past the Lev Tel Aviv police station and down Dizengoff without looking in his mirror.

 By 2004, the police had stopped asking how big the Abergil organization was. They had started asking whether the state had any tools to  touch it. In June 2002, Yaakov Abergil, the eldest brother, the founder, is shot to death outside his home in Lod in front of his wife and five children. Israeli police believe Ze’ev Rosenstein ordered the killing.

 No one is ever charged,  and Yitzhak takes command. Two months later, in August, a man named Felix Abutbul, an Israeli businessman with Abergil connections, is assassinated outside the Royal Hotel and Casino in Prague. A masked gunman on a motorcycle fires five bullets into him. A classified US Embassy cable, later released by WikiLeaks, would describe that killing in one sentence: a show of force by the Abergils as they attempted to capture a portion of the European gambling market.

If you want to know what succession looks like in an Israeli criminal organization  in the early 2000s, that cable is the cleanest one-sentence description in the public record. And then, December 11th, 2003, 3:00 in the afternoon, a currency exchange shop on Yehuda Halevi Street in Tel Aviv. Ze’ev Rosenstein walks inside.

He’s a regular. It’s one of his places. He knows everyone. Above the doorframe, attached to the ceiling tile, there is a shaped charge. A man on the street with a cell phone triggers it by remote. Rosenstein walks out of the blast alive, wounded, but alive. Three other men don’t walk out at all.

 Naftali Magad, Rahamim Tsruya, Moshe Mizrahi, civilians. Three names that belong to people who had decided to change some money that afternoon. 18 more are wounded. Prime Minister Ariel Sharon convenes an emergency cabinet  session within hours. The Israeli government added 500 million shekels to the organized crime budget that week.

 The police commissioner compares the bombing publicly to the suicide attack at the Park Hotel that triggered Operation Defensive Shield. 18 years later, an Israeli court called Case 512 will convict Yitzhak Abergil of those three murders, plus the attempted murder of Rosenstein, and sentence him to three life sentences plus 30 years.

The court will find that he gave the order from a hideout in Belgium. The man who pressed the remote detonator on the street, according to the verdict, was an Abergil lieutenant named Yaniv Ben Simon, who will remain a fugitive for another 19 years before being found in a mansion in Johannesburg with 4-m walls and a soundproofed van for snipers in the driveway.

 If you’re still with me on this one, because this is where most people stop and walk away, and I understand why, tell me in the comments, what’s the decision  in your reading that turned a Lod kid who marked his brother’s pistol in pen into a man who could order a bomb from another country and live with three civilian names on the pavement? I actually want to know how you see it, because the Israeli court in 2021  quoted something that was given to him by that old gangster in Ayalon, the man who taught him to read, and the court

tied it directly to this bombing. The judge, Gilia Ravid, wrote that the gray life of a submissive worker in a factory, the workplace to which he was assigned after his release, did not satisfy his personality and aspirations for admiration, money,  honor, and publicity. The prosecutors, during the trial, accused Yitzhak of having literally lived out the climax of The Fountainhead, in which the protagonist blows up a building.

 Yitzhak, from the defendant’s cage, shouted back, “What a disgusting comparison. Maybe you should go ask for forgiveness from the people who were hurt.” That is a sentence he said in court in front of survivors, in front of the families of Magad, Tsruya, and Mizrahi. But to understand the financial machine that funded all of this, the bomb, the payoffs, the lawyers, the Belgian hideout, the Prague casino, the cars, the 48 apartments, you have to understand the Antwerp rail.

 Here is how the ecstasy pipeline actually worked at the process level, because almost nobody who covers this story tells you the mechanics, and the mechanics  are the story. In clandestine laboratories on the Dutch-Belgian border, in the wooded country around Eindhoven and just across into Belgian Limburg, chemists produce MDMA tablets at a manufacturing cost of 15 to 25 US cents per pill, one dose, stamped with a logo, a butterfly, a diamond, a Mitsubishi.

 At one point in the late 1990s, Dutch and Belgian police were dismantling close to 50 such labs a year. The raw pills move to consolidation points in Paris,  Brussels, Frankfurt, and Amsterdam. From there, a Belgian-based Abergil operative, the best documented one is a man named Moshe Malul, packages shipments of 76 kg.

 That’s roughly 350,000 tablets per shipment. At that weight, a single courier cannot carry one. So the courier network becomes the bottleneck. The organization solves the bottleneck four ways at once. Human mules swallow latex packages and fly commercial, 30,000 to  60,000 pills per body. FedEx, DHL, and UPS parcels move smaller volumes declared as jewelry or electronics.

 Strippers recruited from Manhattan clubs, scores, teens, are paid $10,000 per trip to fly Brussels to JFK with a suitcase. And then, there’s the method that the DEA would eventually give a name to, the holy rollers, Hasidic yeshiva students recruited in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, and Monsey, New York.

 They are paid a $200 finder’s fee, told they are currying diamonds, protecting community stones, and each one carries between 30,000 and 45,000 pills into the United States. >>  >> They return home, in some cases, with as much as half a million dollars in cash strapped to their bodies. They did not know what they were carrying.

 Several of them, when they were eventually caught, were in their early 20s and had never been outside their neighborhood before. The production cost, remember, is 15 to 25 cents. The Belgian wholesale price to Malul’s network, roughly two US dollars a pill. The Los Angeles mid-level handoff to the distributors, six to eight dollars.

The retail price in a Hollywood club, a Las Vegas hotel, a Miami Beach house party, 25 to 40 dollars. Do the math on 350,000 tablets. By 2000, US Customs is telling Congress that Israeli organized crime controls the multi-billion dollar US ecstasy trade from production through international smuggling.

 DEA seizure volumes climb from a few hundred thousand doses in 1995 to 11.1 million  doses in 2000 alone. The most commonly cited figure that Israeli networks control 75% of the American ecstasy supply is not an official publication. >>  >> It is an estimate from senior US and Israeli investigators, but no one in either agency has ever argued it down.

And the part no one tells you is this. The ecstasy pipeline didn’t invent its own infrastructure. It tapped  into something that already existed. I covered the Lebanese diamond networks  a few scripts back. The ones that move stones out of West Africa through Antwerp. And what  I didn’t get into there because it was a different story was the other direction.

The return traffic. Because Antwerp police, quoted in Israeli newspapers in 2004, put it in one sentence. Israelis had smuggling networks in place for years shipping stolen diamonds through Brussels and Amsterdam to points worldwide. When ecstasy  appeared, they simply tapped into the diamond routes. The same couriers, the same bonded warehouses, the same freight forwarding agents in the Antwerp diamond district who knew which customs officer asked questions and which one didn’t.

 The Hasidic students carrying 45,000 pills to JFK thought they were protecting diamonds because structurally they were using the diamond infrastructure just running a different commodity through it. That is the Antwerp rail. It predates the ecstasy trade by a generation. The Abergils didn’t build it. They used it.

 And that is why when American agents finally started unwinding the pipeline in 2003, they had to go through the diamond industry to find it. They found it in a parking lot in the San Fernando Valley. August 31st, 2003. 10:30 at night. A Mitsubishi sedan is parked outside a restaurant called Cafe Basil on Ventura Boulevard in Encino.  A strip mall corner about an hour northwest of downtown Los Angeles.

 The man getting into the driver’s seat is named Sammy Atias. He is an Israeli national. He is an Abergil  associate. 15 months earlier, Atias allegedly stole a shipment of 76 kg of ecstasy from a Malul consignment in Belgium. 350,000 tablets. He was told and he knew that the shipment was Yitzhak Abergil’s.

From a car parked at the far end of the lot, a man is watching. His name is Luis Sandoval.  Street name Barney Twin. Also called Hog. He is a leader of the Vineland Boys,  a Salvadoran-American street gang out of the San Fernando Valley with roughly 300 members. In the back of Sandoval’s car, two of his soldiers are waiting.

A third man, unidentified in the federal record to this day, approaches Atias from behind as he opens the door. Sammy Atias is shot in the head at close range beside his own car in a Los Angeles strip mall on a Sunday night. Three days later in a different parking lot, Mosha Malul meets Sandoval and his three men and hands them the payment in cash.

 And somewhere in a hotel room in Malaga, Spain, Yitzhak Abergil tells a man he believes to be a trusted associate that he offered help with the Atias murder. >>  >> That man is wearing a wire. The wire is running in a DEA operation that has been open for over a year. And here is the contrast. The received wisdom about Israeli organized crime is that it is a closed ethnic system.

 That Israeli mafia kills Israeli mafia and everything happens inside one language, one diaspora, one set of cafes. That’s the assumption built into the movies and into most of the reporting. >>  >> That’s not what the Atias murder was. The Atias murder was a hit subcontracted by an Israeli organization headquartered in Lod to a Salvadoran-American street gang operating out of Sun Valley, California.

The triggerman was Central American. The  payment was in US dollars in a parking lot. The Israeli mafia at the peak of its American operations had outsourced its most consequential hit in the United States to a gang of teenagers from an hour outside Hollywood. That fact sits in a federal indictment. No one has ever quite known what to do with it.

What it did was give the Americans a way in. Five years later on a Monday afternoon in late July 2008, Margarita Lautin is eating dinner with her family at a restaurant called Tobago on the Bat Yam boardwalk, 30 km south of Tel Aviv. She is 31 years old. She is a social worker from the town of Yehud.

 She immigrated from the former Soviet Union as a child. Beside her at the table, her husband Alex, her 5-year-old daughter, her 2-year-old son. Three tables away with his back to the promenade sits a man named Rami Amira. He is an Abergil lieutenant from Bat Yam. He is preparing, according to later court findings, to split off and run his own crew.

Dine with him. Multi Hasson, >>  >> Yitzhak’s right hand, and another associate named Simantov Hataya. At a separate table, three undercover police officers are watching Amira. They are unarmed. They are surveillance only. At roughly 5:00 in the afternoon, two men arrive on a motorcycle. The shooter walks onto the terrace. Amira runs.

Hasson runs. The shooter fires anyway across the tables into the crowd. A bullet enters Margarita Lautin’s chest. She dies in her husband’s arms in front of her 5-year-old daughter and her 2-year-old son at an outdoor restaurant on a summer evening in Israel.  The triggerman, Ronin Ben Adi, and the getaway driver, Shimon Sabah, were both Abergil members from Bat Yam.

Both were convicted in May 2010. Ben Adi received life plus 350,000 shekels in compensation payable to Lautin’s two daughters. Sabah got 7 years. Rami Amira himself, the intended target, would later donate a Torah scroll to a Bat Yam synagogue partially dedicated to Margarita Lautin. Two and a half years after that on February 2nd, 2011, three weeks after Yitzhak Abergil was extradited, Amira was shot to death outside a courthouse in Rishon LeZion by members of his own former organization.

 He did not live long enough to see the scroll he had dedicated to her returned to ordinary use. This was the moment the empire’s reach exceeded the state’s tolerance. From Bat Yam forward, the calendar of the Abergil organization was no longer being set by Yitzhak. It was being  set by three letters he had never heard a year earlier. Lamed.

Heh. Bet. Lahav. 4 33. And if you’re still here, because I know this one is heavy, I want to hear this. Lautin’s 5-year-old daughter watched her mother die in her father’s arms 6 ft from a man who wasn’t even the target. Tell me in the comments, is there a line in your reading between ordering a bomb at a currency exchange and standing for the consequences at a boardwalk restaurant 6 years later? I want to see how you read it because the Israeli state >>  >> in 2008 was about to argue that there is no line at all. That the man who sent

the Yehuda Halevi bomb and the man who sent the Bat Yam motorcycle were the same man giving the same order using a pipeline he had personally built over 25 years. And the tools the state would use to prove it, every single one of them had been invented in the previous five. Lahav 433. Founded January 1st, 2008 at the initiative of Israel’s public security minister, Avi Dichter, and the head of police investigations, Yohanan Danino.

Modeled explicitly on the American FBI, it folded in the national fraud squad, the security economic unit, the elite counterterror unit known as the Gidanim, and a new  witness protection authority, the first one Israel had ever operated. The combating criminal organizations law had been on the books since 2003, but before Lahav 433, there had been no single agency mandated to apply it.

 Now, there was. The Americans had been waiting. A DEA and ICE task force in Las Vegas had been unwinding an Abergil-linked ecstasy  and money laundering ring, the Jerusalem Network, since early 2003. A Toronto-based associate named Gabriel Ben Harosh had been extradited in 2004 and had, in the second year of his house arrest in Los Angeles,  spilled the beans.

A Las Vegas club owner named Hi Waknine had been flipped by 2007. Piece by piece, the Americans had built a case not on Yitzhak’s Israeli crimes, which they had no jurisdiction over, but on the American predicate acts. The Encino murder, the Los Angeles ecstasy distribution, the $2 million extortion of a Beverly Hills luxury car dealer, the Sheraton Miami meeting where Yitzhak personally set a Florida businessman’s debt  at $330,000.

On July 13th, 2008, under seal, the US Attorney  for the Central District of California, Thomas P. O’Brien, filed a 77-page  indictment. 32 counts, seven defendants, Yitzhak and Meir Abergil, plus Sasson Barashi, Moshe Malul, Israel Ozifa, Yoram Elal, and Louis Sandoval. Racketeering, conspiracy to commit murder, conspiracy to import MDMA from Belgium, extortion, money laundering.

Counts 13 through 32, every single one tied to the Israel Trade Bank proceeds. The judge assigned to the case was Christina A. Snyder. Meir, before his extradition, told an Israeli television interviewer dismissively, “Who are we? We’re peanuts compared to the mafias they have in America. Who are we?  Nothing. Cockroaches.

” It is the only public statement any Abergil brother has ever made about the American case, and he delivered it with a shrug. The Jerusalem District Court approved the extradition in July 2009. On December 6th, 2010, the Israeli Supreme Court rejected the final appeal. And there’s something I’ll get to at the very end of this, which is what happened in Yitzhak’s bedding during a routine transfer in 2024.

But let me finish the machine first. If you’re still with me on this one, a subscribe would mean a lot. It’s the kind of story that doesn’t get told in English often, and it’s what keeps me making them. January 12th, 2011. A US government aircraft lifts off from Ben Gurion International Airport carrying five men in restraints.

 Yitzhak Abergil, Meir Abergil, Sasson Barashi, Moshe Malul, Israel Ozifa. It is the first extradition of its kind in the history of the state of Israel. The first time Israeli citizens have been handed over to the United States under the 2005 protocol. A protocol written because a different case involving an American-born teenager named Samuel Sheinbein had forced  the Knesset to rewrite the extradition law in 1999.

50 years  after Israel’s founding, one of her citizens stood in a Los Angeles federal courtroom and said, in open allocution, that he had ordered a murder in the valley. This was the first time that sentence had been possible. They land in Los Angeles on the 13th. They are arraigned before Magistrate Judge Ralph Zarefsky.

They are housed at the Metropolitan Detention Center. They receive kosher meals. Yitzhak, on the record, tells the court, “I have never been to the United States.” The dispositions are all plea bargains. None of the brothers goes to trial. Meir pleads to a single count of extortion, the $900,000 extortion of a man named Assi Vaknin, and is  sentenced on August 22nd, 2011, to 36 months, which is time served, plus a $10,000  fine.

He is deported to Israel within 48 hours. Moshe Malul takes 180 months. Israel Ozifa takes 96 months. Sasson Barashi goes to trial on one count, loses, and gets 54 months. Yitzhak, on May 7th, 2012, pleads guilty to racketeering conspiracy, including the conspiracy to murder Sammy Attias,  and to conspiracy to import MDMA.

 His sentence, imposed 2 weeks later, 120 months, 10 years. His allocution read into the federal record in Los Angeles. Attias was killed for interfering with a drug deal in which Abergil and others were involved. That is the sentence on which the first Israeli organized crime extradition in history was closed. On November 18th, 2013, a US Magistrate Judge named Suzanne H.

Segal signed the papers transferring Yitzhak Abergil back to Israel to complete his American sentence on Israeli soil under the bilateral agreement. He arrived at Ayalon Prison, the same prison where, at 19, he had learned to read, on January 30th, 2014. And the Israeli case against him for Yehuda Halevi was only just beginning.

Case five.  12 took another 7 years. Five state witnesses testified behind bulletproof glass. One potential witness, a man named Yoni Alzam, had been found poisoned with cyanide in his prison cell on the night before an earlier related testimony. So, the court this time took no chances. On November 16th, 2021, Yitzhak Abergil was convicted of the murders of Naftali Magad, Rahamim Sruya, and Moshe Mizrahi, and of the attempted murder of Ze’ev Rosenstein.

 On June 28th, 2022, Judge Gilia Ravid sentenced  him to three life sentences plus 30 years plus 1 and 1/2 million shekels in compensation to the victims’ families. On November 10th, 2024, the Israeli Supreme Court finalized the sentence  at three life plus 22 years. During a routine transfer from Ayalon to Hadarim Prison in 2024, corrections officers searched his bedding.

They found a handcuff key. He spent 7 days in solitary confinement. He denied any escape plan and claimed the key had been planted by the prison service. The investigation was closed without charges. That was the last public incident involving him. He is held now in the secure wing of Shatta Prison in the Jezreel Valley in northern Israel.

 He lives in a cell with two carefully vetted fellow inmates. He receives only first-degree relative visits. His phone calls are limited. The books on his shelf are the books he has been reading for 30 years. Nietzsche, Rand, the Hassid he never quite got. Someone who still speaks to him told the Jerusalem Post in November 2024, on condition of anonymity, Abergil himself  has been left all but penniless, tired, and exhausted from the prolonged legal battle and lengthy imprisonment.

Meir was paroled  in June 2021 after serving 2 and 1/2 years of his case 512 plea. Vianel, he lives quietly on a moshav with his wife and four children. The Jerusalem Post notes, “Since then, Meir has kept a low profile and avoided criminal involvement. Yaakov has been dead for 24 years.” And in Lod, in the Ben Yehuda neighborhood, the Binyan Rakavit still stands.

 The long, low, boxcar-shaped public housing blocks the Israeli government built in the 1960s when they emptied the transit camps and had nowhere cheaper to put the families. Two-room apartments, seven children, not counting the parents. The bomb shelters underneath them are still accessible, some of them locked, most of them not, their metal doors rusting on their hinges in the Mediterranean sun.

An hour’s drive north of these buildings, in a cell at Shatta, a 57-year-old man sits at a small table with his hearing aids on a shelf and reads Nietzsche in Hebrew translation. The buildings on Ben Yehuda Street did not change. One of the boys who slept in them did.

 

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