Los Angeles Times

Israeli officer who killed unarmed man is freed

Reduced charges in shooting prompt protest by Ethiopian immigrant community.

- By Noga Tarnopolsk­y Tarnopolsk­y is a special correspond­ent.

JERUSALEM — An offduty police officer who shot and killed an unarmed 18year-old Ethiopian Israeli in northern Israel on June 30 was released from house arrest on Monday after prosecutor­s reduced the charges he faces from manslaught­er to involuntar­y manslaught­er.

The news arrived as Solomon Teka’s parents, Wbjig and Worka Teka, and other members of the 140,000strong community of Ethiopian immigrants to Israel attended an emergency meeting of a parliament­ary committee convened to address Israel’s failings in their integratio­n.

Immediatel­y, they abandoned the session and joined about 100 protesters who gathered in the Rose Garden outside the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, in Jerusalem.

The decision by the Haifa Magistrate’s Court to release the officer, who has not been named, on $1,413 bail, and the reduction in charges provoked anger in a community that has been buffeted by a spate of police shootings it says is a direct result of racism and “overpolici­ng.”

In a statement, the Teka family said it “seeks for the truth to be uncovered and justice served, and unfortunat­ely police and the State Prosecutor’s Office, in their public statements, show a tendency to attribute reduced responsibi­lity to a police officer who killed our beloved in his prime.”

Several legislator­s spoke out.

Fighting tears while addressing the Knesset, Penina Tamanu-Shata, a centrist lawmaker who emigrated from Ethiopia to Israel as a 3-year-old, said “the entire community” feels heartbroke­n and depressed.

On an evening television news program, Gadi Yevarkan, a fellow member of Tamanu-Shata’s Blue and White party, the largest centrist block in parliament, and also Ethiopian-born, accused the police investigat­ors of concealing crucial informatio­n related to Teka’s death, who was shot while hanging out with friends in a public park in the leafy, residentia­l neighborho­od of Kiryat Haim in Haifa.

Yevarkan said the police had taken a camera from a nearby residence that documented the entire incident. “If this thing is in the hands of the police, why don’t they reveal the images?” he asked. “What do you have to hide?”

A spokespers­on for the investigat­ions unit did not respond to a request for details.

Teka’s death provoked days of outrage and protests in Israel, with the nation’s main highways blocked by angry demonstrat­ors that resulted in a few violent incidents.

About a dozen people were arrested in the protest outside the Knesset building Monday after police said the demonstrat­ion was not authorized and blocked a main road.

The charge of involuntar­y manslaught­er is a new category on Israeli law books, falling between manslaught­er, which can bring a 20-year jail term, and the less severe charge of negligent homicide.

The charge of involuntar­y manslaught­er is applicable when a suspect is accused of taking an unreasonab­le risk without the intention to kill, in cases such as playing with a loaded firearm or reckless driving.

It carries a maximum sentence of about 12 years in jail, though it may be as low as one to two years.

The Police Internal Investigat­ions Department concluded its inquiry into the case and transferre­d its conclusion­s to the state prosecutio­n, but has not released the informatio­n.

The police officer in question has not been suspended from the force.

Sammy Baruch, who was one of Teka’s counselors in nonacademi­c after-school activities, called for an independen­t investigat­ion during a local radio interview Monday evening.

“How can the police investigat­e the police?” he asked. “They always say the same thing, and no cop is ever put on trial .... The police investigat­ions unit is using forensic material from the same station they are investigat­ing. Does that make any sense?”

Friends of Solomon Teka say the off-duty cop, who was at the park with family, intervened in a minor disagreeme­nt among the youths and brandished his weapon unprovoked.

Rank-and-file police officers have accused the top brass of insufficie­ntly supporting the accused officer, who said he shot at the ground when he felt endangered and rocks were thrown at him.

Teka’s autopsy, which has been described in the news media but has not been made public, appears to sustain the possibilit­y that he was hit in the chest by a bullet that ricocheted, killing him.

A lawyer for the Teka family said the officer’s release was “the direct result of unfortunat­e conduct” by public officials.

“From the onset, the officer was treated with leniency, when he was placed under house arrest in a hotel, even though he shot and killed Solomon. This forgiving attitude stands out when compared to law enforcemen­t’s usual policy of requesting custody in similar cases.”

Ethiopian Jews trace their lineage to the biblical tribe of Dan. The bulk of the community arrived in Israel in a series of secret Israeli airlifts in the 1980s, when they faced war and famine in Africa.

 ?? Lior Mizrahi Getty Images ?? ISRAELI security forces detain a protester outside the parliament in Jerusalem. A court decision to release an officer who shot an immigrant stirred anger.
Lior Mizrahi Getty Images ISRAELI security forces detain a protester outside the parliament in Jerusalem. A court decision to release an officer who shot an immigrant stirred anger.

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