The Jerusalem Post

Hebron man who killed three people in Jerusalem indicted more than three years after murders

Palestinia­n-ISIS terrorist had been in custody for committing minor crimes and was released

- • By YONAH JEREMY BOB

A Palestinia­n associated with ISIS was indicted on Monday in the Jerusalem District Court for three murders, an attempted murder and terrorism. His attacks on three victims date back to 2019, but were only solved recently.

Last week, the Israel Police announced that it had cracked the old cases and that the alleged murderer was Wasim a-Sayed, 34, from Hebron, who was only arrested on March 22 as part of the investigat­ion into the murder of Moldovan migrant worker Ivan Tarnovski in Jerusalem.

According to the indictment, Sayed joined and swore loyalty to ISIS as far back as 2014.

Yet it was not until January 8, 2019, that he entered Israel armed with two knives with the goal of murdering Jews.

What is most bizarre about the case is that he had been in administra­tive detention for an extended period of almost three years regarding his ISIS connection until his midMarch release. Even the Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency) had no clue that he could be tied to the earlier murders.

Rather, he was being held over general concerns of incitement and that he might become more dangerous in the future.

It was only after studying the more recent murder of Tarnovski that common patterns began to be noticed with the earlier attempted murder of teenager Hadar Betzalel in January 2019, and of the murders of elderly couple Yehuda and Tamar Kaduri in their Armon Hanatziv Jerusalem apartment that same month.

According to the indictment, Sayed tried to kill Betzalel, but the victim’s screaming after he stabbed her led him to flee before he could finish her off. His initial attack missed her vital organs.

With the Kaduris, the indictment stated that Sayed followed Yehuda into his apartment from his parking spot and saw that he left to return to his car to get more groceries, including leaving the apartment door unlocked.

Sayed then allegedly entered, stabbed Tamar to death and hid temporaril­y until Yehuda returned, at which time he stabbed him to death as well.

In the case of Tarnovski, Sayed allegedly entered his apartment after finding the door unlocked and stabbed Tarnovski while he was lying in bed.

In addition, Sayed stole

thousands of shekels worth of cash and rings.

All of this means that if guilty, Sayed went on an aspiring murder spree in 2019, was arrested, and then immediatel­y returned to his murder spree upon his release last month.

REACTIONS TO the news last

week were mixed.

Defense Minister Benny Gantz tweeted congratula­tions to the Israel Police and the Shin Bet, saying they succeeded in seizing “the abominable murderer of the couple Yehuda and Tamar Kaduri, who were murdered three years ago in the Armon Hanatziv

neighborho­od of Jerusalem.

“We will pursue anyone who harms the citizens of Israel and bring them to justice – anytime, at any hour, anywhere,” Gantz said.

Public Security Minister Omer Bar Lev also viewed cracking the case as a sign of the Shin Bet and law enforcemen­t’s ingenuity in the face of a complex case.

But other officials slammed law enforcemen­t for failing to see the evidence and the murderer under their noses in custody.

Likud MK Shlomo Karhi even called for an independen­t probe of the failure by the police and Shin Bet to grasp their mistake earlier.

Some family members of the prior victims were also incensed that it had taken so long to solve the cases, especially when the alleged murderer had been in custody all along.

Law enforcemen­t responded by pointing out that hundreds of Palestinia­ns might be in administra­tive detention at a time, with many of them held for general incitement concerns, and not because of any concrete evidence of a past violent crime.

Many more Palestinia­ns, sometimes thousands in a year, are indicted for different levels of violent crimes.

According to law enforcemen­t, Sayed did not fit into their matrix of identifyin­g factors for the 2019 crimes based on what they knew at the time, and only the new informatio­n from the Tarnovski murder changed that.

When the Kaduris were killed, the police even arrested some of their family members as potential suspects motivated for financial reasons.

For example, the Kaduri murders at the time were believed to be carried out for criminal purposes because their residence had been locked and the killer stole money from them.

It was only after catching Sayed illegally crossing through a border fence separating the east and west sides of Jerusalem that police questioned him sufficient­ly to connect him to the Tarnovski murder and to see similariti­es to the earlier incidents.

Investigat­ors were able to compare video footage of the two incidents and, even without being able to get a perfect facial recognitio­n identifica­tion, found enough common physical points to lead to a breakthrou­gh.

Law enforcemen­t also found shoes in Sayed’s residence that could be tied to the Kaduri murders.

In addition, the Kaduris and Tarnovski were all executed in a brutal ISIS-style manner, by slitting their throats.

Sayed eventually allegedly reenacted each of the crimes of which he is accused by law enforcemen­t.

 ?? (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90) ?? WASIM A-SAYED arrives at Jerusalem District Court yesterday for a hearing on the murder of the Kaduri couple in January 2019 and of Ivan Tarnovski in January 2022.
(Yonatan Sindel/Flash90) WASIM A-SAYED arrives at Jerusalem District Court yesterday for a hearing on the murder of the Kaduri couple in January 2019 and of Ivan Tarnovski in January 2022.

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