The Jerusalem Post

Malka Leifer to stay in prison until extraditio­n ruling

Supreme Court says Australian suspected sex offender is flight risk in view of repeated breach of trust

- • By TAMARA ZIEVE (Ronen Zvulun/Reuters)

Australian suspected child sex-offender Malka Leifer will remain in prison until a decision is reached on a petition for her extraditio­n to Australia, the Supreme Court ruled on Sunday.

The judge said the decision was made “in view of the substantia­l fear of her fleeing to escape the law, and repeated breach of trust by the respondent.”

The case was taken to the Supreme Court in appeal of a decision by the Jerusalem District Court earlier this month to release Leifer to house arrest, a ruling which sparked uproar among activists and sex-abuse victims.

The court made the decision after Migdal Ha’emek Chief Rabbi Yitzhak Dovid Grossman offered to supervise and assist Leifer, who claims she suffers from mental illness, arguing that she was unfit to remain in custody. He retracted his offer several days later after realizing that his assistance had been interprete­d as support of an attempt to avoid trial.

Leifer is accused of 74 charges of sexual abuse against at least eight pupils, who were minors at the time, at the Adass Israel School in Melbourne FORMER SCHOOL PRINCIPAL Malka Leifer, who is wanted in Australia on suspicion of sexually abusing students, is accompanie­d down the corridor of the Jerusalem District Court by Israeli Prison Service guards in February. where she served as a teacher and principal from 2003 to 2008.

Police arrested Leifer last month in the West Bank settlement of Emmanuel where she lives, after an undercover investigat­ion indicated that she had been feigning mental illness to avoid extraditio­n to Australia.

“It seems that justice has prevailed and sanity has been restored to both Malka Leifer and the Israeli judicial system,” said Manny Waks, an Australian-Israeli activist working to prevent childhood sexual abuse in Jewish communitie­s worldwide. “Now that she is incarcerat­ed, hopefully the extraditio­n process will be swift, and we can finally see Leifer face justice in Australia. Today is a great day for many people, not least Leifer’s courageous alleged victims.”

Dassi Erlich, a sexual-abuse survivor and activist, campaignin­g on behalf of Leifer’s alleged victims – herself included – said in a statement: “The Supreme Court’s ruling to keep Malka Leifer detained until the conclusion of extraditio­n, is a positive step forward. It addresses the concern of many that she is a flight risk and a possible danger to others.”

She added that: “This ruling will also hopefully limit the stalling tactics of the defense because their client is now sitting in prison awaiting a decision for extraditio­n. We feel strengthen­ed and encouraged by this successful appeal and await the next step in this lengthy road towards justice.”

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