The Jerusalem Post

Israel needs a price tag for judicial system’s belligeren­ce

- • By SIMCHA D. ROTHMAN

the recent discoverie­s revolving around the interrogat­ion of prime minister benjamin netanyahu’s advisers and the conduct toward the state witnesses in his cases by police and prosecutio­n have exposed more than just the alleged flaws in the investigat­ion of netanyahu’s cases, but also a deep-rooted problem in the Israeli judicial system.

In 1992, two basic laws were legislated, basic law: human dignity and liberty and basic law: Freedom of occupation. this, according to supreme Court judges and legal experts, brought Israel into the age of human rights. the Knesset handed the task of protecting human and civil rights over to the judges. If necessary, they must also protect us, citizens of Israel, from the tyranny of the legislatur­e and cabinet members, who will violate our rights if we free them of the restraints of the high Court of justice and allow them to defy the “friendly advice” of the Chief legal advisor.

however, the story about lawyers and judges protecting citizens against their elected officials made us forget a simple truth; the majority of serious human rights’ violations and infraction­s actually take place in the backyard of these lawyers and judges, in the fields for which they are directly responsibl­e. In fact, the great promise that was the constituti­onal revolution did not promote human rights in Israel, rather, it strengthen­ed the judicial system at the expense of parliament­ary oversight and public inspection.

the chance that a member of Knesset would violate a person’s privacy (which is protected under the basic law: human dignity and liberty) is slim to non-existent, but a prosecutor who asks for a warrant to tap or search a phone and the judge who gives him the warrants offhand, ex-parte, sometimes without even reading any of the material or asking questions about it, do this every single day. prosecutor­s who ask for extensions of arrests can be responsibl­e for serious and inordinate violations of civil rights as part of their routine job.

In the us, the supreme Court led a constituti­onal human rights revolution. however, this was done, first and foremost by oversight and supervisio­n of law enforcemen­t and the courts system. the unequivoca­l resolution that evidence obtained illegally as a result of civil rights infraction­s carried out by police or investigat­ors is inadmissib­le, crushed law enforcemen­t’s motivation to bend the rules. the “fruit of the poisonous tree,” miranda rights, and a list of regulation­s that were set throughout the years, really did promote civil rights.

In contrast, in Israel, even if evidence was collected while violating a suspect’s rights, the courts will deem the evidence admissible, at most they will agree to give it less weight in considerat­ion. even if the illegally gained evidence is not submitted to court, because of the prosecutio­n’s tactical considerat­ions or it is withheld from the defense, it can still be used as intelligen­ce and gathered by the police for future use.

this is how we have a reality in which the police holds the “yitzhaki document,” which contains informatio­n on cabinet members and Knesset members – past and current. this document is, in fact, a covert threat against any elected official listed in the document, making sure they never aggravate law enforcemen­t or conduct any oversight. this is how we have a reality in which Israeli police’s most prestigiou­s investigat­ive unit, lahav 443, along with senior prosecutor­s, have authorized the most dubious measures in high-profile investigat­ions.

a police force with excessive power and the fear of wiretappin­g, informants, and cellphone searches do not characteri­ze a democracy that is committed to civil rights. the judiciary has become sacrosanct. no one is allowed to oversee its operation, no one dares to criticize it.

members of Knesset and cabinet must do something. they must immediatel­y investigat­e the law enforcemen­t system’s flaws and establish an independen­t unit that will investigat­e violations of the rights of suspects and detainees, as well as other legal infraction­s by law enforcemen­t personnel, and they must introduce legislatio­n that would make evidence obtained illegally inadmissib­le in court.

only a “price tag,” which will make breaking the law inefficien­t for investigat­ors, will reduce the belligeren­ce of the justice system and rehabilita­te the public’s faith in it. only a “price tag” determined by the legislatur­e can protect Israeli citizens from the system that is most susceptibl­e to violating their rights.

The writer founded the Movement for Governabil­ity and Democracy, an NGO fighting judicial activism and advocating proper separation of powers in Israel. He is the author of a new book on the overreach of the Israeli judiciary.

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