The Jerusalem Post

Court confirms acquittal in Halak shooting case

- • Jerusalem Post Staff

The Supreme Court on Thursday dismissed the petition filed by human rights organizati­ons on behalf of the parents of Iyad al-Halak, who was killed by an Israeli Border Police officer four years ago in Jerusalem’s Old City.

The petition was against the decision of the Police Investigat­ion Department and the State Attorney’s Office not to appeal the Jerusalem District Court’s ruling that acquitted the officer who killed Halak in May 2020.

According to the investigat­ion, Halak, 32, was walking to the special-needs school where he both worked and studied. He noticed two police officers shouting and running toward him and immediatel­y ran off.

Police gave chase and fired two shots in Halak’s direction. He kept running and eventually went into a nearby shed, where another officer opened fire and wounded him. A third officer reportedly shot Halak while he was lying on the ground, killing him instantly.

Following a police investigat­ion in October 2020, the officer who shot Halak dead was charged with manslaught­er, which Adalah, an Arab minority rights group, says almost never occurs. However, the officer was acquitted on all charges in July 2023.

The officer’s claim of “perceived self-defense” was accepted by the court as legitimate. Following the ruling, Adalah and the Meezan Organizati­on for Human Rights (Nazareth) filed a petition on behalf of Halak’s parents, claiming that the decision was extremely unreasonab­le and warranted Supreme Court review.

The petition argued that the court’s ruling set new legal norms, and failing to challenge them would have significan­t legal consequenc­es.

According to the petition, the decision effectivel­y lowers the threshold for the justifiabl­e use of lethal force by police officers, which could virtually eliminate all criminal accountabi­lity in cases where Palestinia­ns are killed by law enforcemen­t.

In addition, the petition argued that the judgment unreasonab­ly expands the parameters of self-defense in criminal law, relying solely on the officer’s subjective perception of danger.

The Supreme Court reviewed the arguments and rejected the need for an appeal. Justices David Mintz, Khaled Kabub, and Ruth Ronnen handed down the judgment unanimousl­y.

Most cases in the Supreme Court are overseen by three of the 15 sitting justices, with only major cases receiving the full attention of the court.

The Supreme Court said that there was no basis for judicial interferen­ce and that it would only do so in highly exceptiona­l and exceedingl­y rare cases.

The court rejected arguments that the Police or the State Attorney’s Office had been influenced by outside factors. The court also dismissed the petition’s assertion that it would set a legal precedent.

 ?? (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90) ?? THE MOTHER OF Iyad Halak, a special needs student who was shot and killed by a Border Police officer four years ago, reacts after a session at the Jerusalem District Court in July last year.
(Yonatan Sindel/Flash90) THE MOTHER OF Iyad Halak, a special needs student who was shot and killed by a Border Police officer four years ago, reacts after a session at the Jerusalem District Court in July last year.

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