Los Angeles Times

Suspect in Tel Aviv attack slain

Nashat Milhem, 29, was described as an Arab Israeli with a history of violence and instabilit­y.

- By Batsheva Sobelman Sobelman is a special correspond­ent.

JERUSALEM — After a weeklong manhunt, the man suspected of fatally shooting three Israelis in Tel Aviv was killed Friday by special police forces that surrounded his hiding place in the Wadi Ara area in northern Israel, authoritie­s say.

According to police, suspect Nashat Milhem emerged from a structure by a mosque and opened fire with a rifle. The police forces returned fire and killed him.

The unusual slayings a week ago and the fact that the killer remained at large had concerned Israelis, and authoritie­s aimed to deflect public criticism of the investigat­ion.

Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan this week had defended the police force, which has come under criticism from the public and news media for a perceived sluggish response to the incident and its failure to capture the killer.

It isn’t unheard of for criminals to escape for some time, Erdan said in a radio interview, adding that “there is no 100% guarantee of success in capturing terrorists.”

Milhem was being sought after a gunman opened fire Jan. 1 on a group of people celebratin­g a birthday at the Simta bar on Dizengoff Street, a main commercial and entertainm­ent stretch in Tel Aviv.

Alon Bakal, 26, and Shimon Ruimi, 31, were killed and several others injured before the shooter fled. Shortly afterward, a taxi driver was found shot dead in another part of town; his car was found later.

Milhem, 29, was described as an Arab Israeli with a history of violence and instabilit­y whose relatives notified the police after recognizin­g him on CCTV footage shown after the shooting. Milhem had served a five-year jail term for attacking a soldier in 2006, which he said was to avenge a cousin’s killing by police during a raid. He was found fit to stand trial.

The family had denounced the shootings and reached out to Milhem via the news media to turn himself in. However, several of Milhem’s relatives have been arrested, including his father, whose gun was used for the attack.

Israelis were gripped by the Tel Aviv violence attributed to one assailant despite the dozens of stabbings, car rammings and shooting attacks carried out by Palestinia­ns in recent months. Israeli and Palestinia­n clashes have resulted in deaths on both sides.

Many details of the Milhem case were under a court-issued gag order, but, according to police and media reports, Milhem scouted the area in the days before the attack and took his father’s gun. Before the attack, he turned off his cellphone and left it between residentia­l buildings in Tel Aviv, where it was found by a schoolgirl after the shootings, according to reports.

After running from the scene of the bar shooting, Milhem reportedly got into a taxi driven by Amin Shaaban, a 42-year-old father of 11 from Lod.

Shaaban was found shot dead in a northern area of Tel Aviv. The car was found later at another location, not far away. The killer had reportedly disabled the cameras in the taxi.

Initially Milhem was thought to be hiding in northern Tel Aviv, where his trail cut off and which he knew well from a delivery job at a local greengroce­r.

After armed forces combed the neighborho­od for several days and many anxious parents kept their children home from school, police Tuesday announced that there was less reason for tension in Tel Aviv.

Authoritie­s did not elaborate, but the large police and army forces were diverted farther north, where they searched Arab towns and villages in the Wadi Ara area.

On Friday, security and government officials congratula­ted police, army and intelligen­ce forces. Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon praised the forces’ work and said the final result “proves Israel will hunt down all those who seek its harm.”

“I knew the terrorist would be caught sooner or later,” David Bakal, whose son Alon was killed in the attack, told reporters. “The only comfort in this is that none of our guys was scratched in the operation and he got what he deserved.”

 ?? Gil Eliyahu European Pressphoto Agency ?? SPECIAL FORCES patrol in an Israeli Arab village during the search for a man who opened fire at a Tel Aviv bar, killing two, and later killed a taxi driver.
Gil Eliyahu European Pressphoto Agency SPECIAL FORCES patrol in an Israeli Arab village during the search for a man who opened fire at a Tel Aviv bar, killing two, and later killed a taxi driver.

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