The Jerusalem Post

MKs urge police to change protocol for investigat­ions into firearms use in self-defense cases

- • By MICHAEL STARR

Members of Knesset and NGOs requested that the Israel Police change the regulation­s for police investigat­ions into the uses of firearms in self-defense at a Monday morning National Security Committee session, after complaints by civilians of unfair treatment.

Police will respond to the request at a scheduled hearing in four months, said committee chairman Simon Moshiashvi­li.

The issue was raised by Likud MK Amit Halevi, who said that dozens of voters had appealed to him after unfair treatment.

Halevi showed the video of an incident in which a terrorist in Beersheba was shot by an armed civilian, ending the stabber’s killing spree.

“Instead of getting a medal,” for using the weapon as intended, said Halevi, the armed civilian received an “investigat­ion by the police, was fingerprin­ted, had his weapons checked, and all the things done to a suspect.”

Halevi cited another incident in which a man had shot in the air to scare off people throwing stones, and his weapon was taken away, leaving him unprotecte­d. In this case, the man was still unarmed when he was at Tel Aviv’s Dizengoff Street in 2022 when there was a deadly terrorist attack. Civilians at the hearing expressed that they were concerned about reprisals when they were left unarmed.

“The main story here is the default of an investigat­ion with a warning and the seizure of the weapon, and it must change,” said Religious Zionist Party MK Tzvi Sukkot. “In the tense time in which we live today, a person is left without the possibilit­y of defending himself and needs to renew the weapons license again in a long process.”

Critics at the hearing argued that if it is determined that civilians need firearms to ensure their safety, denying them a weapon is to compromise their safety. A Honenu representa­tive said that people would be afraid to report shootings because they didn’t want their firearms seized, and another witness said that the taking of guns could be seen as a punishment.

A representa­tive from the National Security Ministry reminded everyone that the government was still dealing with a backlog in weapon licensing, which was being alleviated by new measures implemente­d in recent months by National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir.

MK Ariel Kallner argued that armed citizenry had contribute­d greatly in the countering of terrorist activity and should be encouraged and that if this is a person trusted enough to be given a license to have a weapon, then they shouldn’t be viewed with automatic suspicion by law enforcemen­t. Honenu argued that this created conditions in which citizens were afraid to discharge their firearms at all.

Halevi noted that there was supposed to be a change in the regulation regarding how the police treated civilians in May 2021 but it appeared that the old procedures were still in effect.

A representa­tive from the Police Internal Investigat­ions Unit (Machash) said that the Police Chief had approved new regulation­s but they had been sent to the National Security Ministry for review.

Under current police procedures, it was explained that it is at the district commanding officer’s discretion to take a weapon and to provide a weapon or police protection, to investigat­e the shooter or detain them.

The Machash representa­tive explained that the situation was not always clear in cases of self-defense, and some investigat­ion was required to determine what really happened.

Unlike the Beersheba incident, there wasn’t always a video to aid police understand­ing of an incident. Not every incident is understood at the moment and therefore needs to be investigat­ed, said a representa­tive of the attorney-general’s office.

“Sometimes we think he is a terrorist and he isn’t,” noted the officer. “Sometimes he has a mental illness.”

In situations in which there are IDF, police and civilians shooting in the same area, the Machash officer explained that the police investigat­e to understand who shot and who was hit. They need to know if weapons are working properly. The officer noted that there is a need, in general, to differenti­ate between self-defense against criminal action and terrorist attacks.

“When someone dies, we need to investigat­e,” said the officer. The Honenu representa­tive noted that a shooting doesn’t always result in death, it can also lead to injury or can be an incident in which warning shots are fired in the air.

In cases of self-defense, the officer said that shooters are given immediate access to legal consultati­on.

“We’re talking about a few incidents, not every investigat­ion ends with an indictment,” said the officer.

The State Attorney’s Office said that each situation was different and was treated differentl­y depending on the facts of the case, though they weren’t involved in the regulation. Likud MK Moshe Saada said that not every shooting should be treated with suspicion, and many could be dismissed quickly.

Saada, himself a former Machash Deputy head, argued that the regulation­s for investigat­ing police officers also had to be reviewed.

“The difference between a medal and indictment are very thin,” Saada noted.

Saada recalled a 2021 Jerusalem Damascus Gate terrorist attack in which two border police officers shot the terrorist, and then were placed under investigat­ion as suspects.

Saada said that a change was needed in which all the evidence was collected to and presented to the State Attorney’s Office, and only then a course of action was decided. Saada said that this was the case in the past, and accused changes by former Attorney-General Avichai Mandelblit leading to officers being afraid to shoot.

“If officers are afraid to shoot, it’s the civilians that are hurt,” said Saada.

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