The Jerusalem Post

More on the Comptrolle­r’s Report,

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

The Judea and Samaria Police have not implemente­d all of the recommenda­tions made to them in the aftermath of the fatal kidnapping of three Israeli teenagers from a Gush Etzion hitchhikin­g post on June 20, 2014, the state comptrolle­r said.

Immediatel­y after the kidnapping, while the teens were still alive, Gil-Ad Shaer, 16, of Talmon managed to call police for help from his cellphone.

But the dispatcher who picked up the call thought it was a prank. The bodies of Shaer, Naftali Fraenkel, 16, and Eyal Yifrah, 19, were found in a ditch near Hebron on June 30.

In looking at police actions over the last two years, from November 2015 to December 2017, the State Comptrolle­r’s Office concluded that the problems with the central dispatch system in Judea and Samaria that caused the call to be mishandled, still exist.

These include a lack of manpower, proper facilities and an effective central dispatch system.

“In January 2017, more than two years after the [kidnapping] incident took place, [police] not yet completed the implementa­tion of all the lessons learned from the harsh incident in which the boys were kidnapped,” the comptrolle­r said.

Judea and Samaria Police said in response that they had made significan­t structural changes, including creating two new dispatch centers and increased manpower.

“The dispatch control center, which provides an optimal response to hundreds of thousands of civilian applicatio­ns every year, has been significan­tly upgraded,” the police said, adding that training has also improved.

But the comptrolle­r took the police to task for lack of coordinati­on, computer issues, failure to properly conduct investigat­ions, and lack of security for the officers.

From 2012 to 2015, the names of 8,000 Palestinia­n drivers charged with traffic violations were not entered into the computer system, making legal action against them difficult, the comptrolle­r said.

In addition, the mechanism for sharing data among the IDF’s computers and those of the Israel Police and the Civil Administra­tion of Judea and Samaria had not been updated, the report stated.

Police said the computer interface between police and the IDF has been operationa­l since August 2017 and that enforcemen­t on the roads has also improved.

Regarding officer safety, the comptrolle­r said that police in Judea and Samaria had vehicles that were not fully bullet proof and the vests officers wear do not offer the full protection needed.

Officers are therefore placed in situations where their lives are unnecessar­ily at risk, the report said.

Lack of proper procedures at the scene of incidents endangers officers’ lives and makes it difficult to properly collect evidence, the comptrolle­r concluded.

The comptrolle­r chastised police and the government for not acting more swiftly to come up with the correct procedures for investigat­ing incidents in which Border Police officers killed or wounded Palestinia­ns.

The police have handled these investigat­ions when they should have been conducted by the Military Police, particular­ly given that these situations can involve violations of internatio­nal law, the report said.

The idea to have the Military Police handle the investigat­ions was first suggested by security experts in 2007, and backed by the Turkel Commission in 2013 and the Ciechanove­r Report in 2015.

The Military Police was only given authority to operate in Judea and Samaria in 2016, and it was only in 2017 that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered it to handle such investigat­ions.

The comptrolle­r also took issue with the use of civilian investigat­ors to examine these incidents.

Police said in response that they had not wanted to get into the issue of investigat­ing incidents against Palestinia­ns and had done so only to fill a vacuum in this area.

 ?? (IDF) ?? THE KIDNAPPING VICTIMS are seen in an IDF poster from 2014. It was subsequent­ly discovered that a Hamas cell had murdered them.
(IDF) THE KIDNAPPING VICTIMS are seen in an IDF poster from 2014. It was subsequent­ly discovered that a Hamas cell had murdered them.

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