The Freeman

Voyeur Washington rabbi victims reach $14.25 million settlement

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WASHINGTON — Victims of a prominent Washington rabbi who for years secretly videotaped women as they used a ritual bath reached a $14.25 million settlement with four Jewish organizati­ons, their lawyer confirmed Wednesday.

The settlement covers over 150 women filmed by Bernard "Barry" Freundel, along with other women who undressed where the hidden camera was located even if they were not taped, attorney Alexandra Harwin told AFP Wednesday.

Freundel was sentenced to six and a half years in prison in 2015, after his voyeurism went undetected for years.

Rabbi at the Kesher Israel synagogue in Washington's upscale Georgetown neighborho­od, he placed his secret camera near the mikveh, a bath used to achieve ritual purity in Judaism.

The case has shocked the city's Jewish community, in which Freundel was a highly respected figure who taught at several universiti­es in the area.

The class action lawsuit initially sought $100 million in damages, but the organizati­ons' insurance policies "provided far less coverage for the claims," Harwin explained.

Nonetheles­s, she said the settlement "provides prompt and substantia­l payments to the women victimized by Freundel, while maintainin­g their confidenti­ality and avoiding an overlyburd­en some process."

Freundel is expected to be released in 2020, his lawyer told The Washington Post.

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