Jonathan Pollard

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  • #912870
    m in Israel
    Member

    CherryBim — “And there is a difference of an enemy spying against an enemy (it’s expected) and a “friend” spying, which is much worse.” This may be your opinion, but fortunately it is not the law. The law considers spying for an enemy significantly worse, with far more severe sentencing. (I guess most politicians and governments are not as naive as you present, and they expect spying from everyone! There have been many other spies convicted of spying for friendly nations)

    Charliehall – The claim of the Bochurim in Japan was that they thought they were legally bringing in antiquities, which were hidden in the false bottoms of the suitcases in order to prevent theft or damage. Prosecutors admit that when they went through customs at the airport they did not act in a way that fit the profile of someone who is nervous or secretive, and they all passed lie detector tests to the effect that they trusted the guy who told them this was legal. There is no reason to assume they were not taught Bava Kamma. Maybe they weren’t taught common sense, but that is a different story. . .

    #912871
    Jose
    Member

    Charlie,

    You have got to make up your mind about Dina dimalchusa. In one comment, you treat as the be all and end all and in another you say “well….”.

    Besides, it is likely that dina demalchusa relates to the country one “dwells” in. These boys certainly did not dwell in Japan.

    And what happened to Y. W. Editor’s contention that 99.99% of what you said was factually incorrect based on specific research he has done. Apparently being a PhD does not mean one can do research beyond a google seacrh.

    #912873
    tzippi
    Member

    Ok, so keep it simple: Please consider pardoning, clemency, whatever the nusach is as he’s served ample time for the charges.

    To anyone who is ambivalent about these public efforts for various people in prison who all did do something, even if not what they were charged for: don’t send in your money. Don’t make the phone calls. But do have them in mind when you daven, if not during Matir Asurim then that Hashem should see fit to deal with them in a way that is perfect justice that we can be mekabel.

    #912874
    m in Israel
    Member

    Actually, in both the case of Jonathan Pollard and the case of the Bochurim in Japan, there seemed to have been significant stupidity on the part of the defendants — in Pollard’s case thinking he could get a better sentence by building up media pressure, in violation of his agreement and against the desire of his lawyers, and in the Japan case by not realizing that deals too good to be true usually aren’t — but the punishment for stupidity is not life in prison.

    #912875

    agreed on both cases…all should be freed already

    #912876
    klach
    Member

    mikehall – First, legally, lack of knowledge and intent, (if proven,) means one DID NOT COMMIT THE CRIME!! Knowledge & intenet are vital components in the perpetration of a crime in any reasonable legal system. The only caveat is that this is not an excuse to be stupid and naive on purpose, etc, which these bochurim were clearly not.

    Second, to those who support freeing Pollard for the RIGHT reasons, his religous affiliation at the time and the state of isreal haave no relevance whatsoever The gedolim support this tremendous mitzvah.

    EDITED

    #912877
    klach
    Member

    to explain – legally, a crime can be said to have happened without anybody perpetrating the crime.

    #912878
    klach
    Member

    i have 2 lawyers and a judge in my family

    #912879
    klach
    Member

    m in isreal – well said assuming those are absolutely the facts

    #912880
    klach
    Member

    to Mod: it is disgraceful that someone would insiuate that gedolei yisroel would care about something so stupid, trivial, & inane as religous affiliation over the real issues involved with a situation such as this.

    #912881
    klach
    Member

    by the way, does anyone really believe that assange will ever go to jail for wiki-leaks? cause i don’t.

    #912882
    rasha gamur
    Member

    I heard that obama is considering granting pollard clemency. any truth to this?

    #912883
    mos yumos
    Member

    Taka. Some official in Washington said something about it.

    #912884
    happiest
    Member

    mos yumos, even if Pollard is granted clemency he is not going to leave jail of his own free will. What he wants is an apology from America and he is not going to get one. So until he gets it, he is staying put. This I heard from someone who is very close to the Pollard family. I am not making it up!

    #912885
    Dr. Seuss
    Member

    Pollard plans to break out of prison and escape to Israel. I heard this from Pollard himself.

    #912886

    its such a disgrace that he’s still in jail. I saw someone who wrote that he thinks that obama yemachshemo is hoping he’ll just die already chas veshalom so that he can say they were actually going to free him but then he died first.

    #912887
    Health
    Participant

    CH -“Nope. He and his ex-wife violated the terms of the plea deal by giving interviews without permssion. Prosecutors and judges are not lenient with people who violate plea agreements.”

    JM -“It’s just a matter of how much prison time.”

    Even if he violated the terms first – the usual treatment is to throw out the whole agreement, not to keep the Guilty plea and throw out the light sentence.

    So the issue isn’t a matter of how much prison time -the issue is once a plea agreement is thrown out -then the defendant has a legal right to a trial by his peers.

    If he would have had a trial – the Gov. probably wouldn’t have won the case. There wasn’t a lot of evidence against him. If he would have been acquitted – he would have not served any time in Jail.

    Stop buying the lies from the Gov. and the media. Unfortunately many Jews have bought into these lies as you can see from this old topic!

    #912888
    WolfishMusings
    Participant

    There wasn’t a lot of evidence against him.

    How could you possibly know this?

    If you’re not in the intelligence community, you could not possibly know the evidence that may or may not exist against Mr. Pollard.

    And if you are in the intelligence community (with knowledge of the case), you’re a fool for posting about it here on a public message board.

    The Wolf

    #912889
    JayMatt19
    Participant

    @Health

    I am sorry but you are wrong. Robert Hanssen, who was also arrested for espionage, also took a deal. He was to be spared the death penalty and he would have some freedoms in jail. Part of his plea was that he had to pass a lie detector test. When he failed the test, they reneged on their part of the deal. He now spends 23 hours a day locked up in a supermax prison.

    His failing the lie detector test did not automatically withdraw his plea and his deal. Nor did it do the same when Pollard gave the interviews.

    #912890
    JayMatt19
    Participant

    @Health

    Try reading the official court documents, not the articles in the media. You might learn something

    United States Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit. – 959 F.2d 1011

    Argued Sept. 10, 1991.Decided March 20, 1992.Order Amending Opinion May 28, 1992

    http://law.justia.com/cases/federal/appellate-courts/F2/959/1011/220032/

    Here is a soundbite:

    9

    Pollard had, in the meantime, begun plea discussions with the government. He sought to plead guilty both to minimize his chances of receiving a life sentence and to enable Anne Pollard to plead as well, which the government was otherwise unwilling to let her do. The government, however, was prepared to offer Pollard a plea agreement only after Pollard consented to assist the government in its damage assessment and submitted to polygraph examinations and interviews with FBI agents and Department of Justice attorneys. Accordingly, over a period of several months, Pollard cooperated with the government investigation, and in late May of 1986, the government offered him a plea agreement, which he accepted.

    10

    11

    In return for Pollard’s plea, the government promised not to charge him with additional crimes, entered into a plea agreement with Anne Pollard, and made several specific representations that are very much at issue in this case. The critical provisions are paragraphs 4(a) and 4(b) of the agreement, in which the government “agree[d] as follows”:

    12

    (a) When [Pollard] appears before the Court for sentencing for the offense to which he has agreed to plead guilty, the Government will bring to the Court’s attention [295 U.S.App.D.C. 13] the nature, extent and value of his cooperation and testimony. Because of the classified nature of the information Mr. Pollard has provided to the Government, it is understood that particular representations concerning his cooperation may have to be made to the Court in camera. In general, however, the Government has agreed to represent that the information Mr. Pollard has provided is of considerable value to the Government’s damage assessment analysis, its investigation of this criminal case, and the enforcement of the espionage laws.

    13

    (b) Notwithstanding Mr. Pollard’s cooperation, at the time of sentencing the Government will recommend that the Court impose a sentence of a substantial period of incarceration and a monetary fine. The Government retains full right of allocution at all times concerning the facts and circumstances of the offenses committed by Mr. Pollard, and will be free to correct any misstatements of fact at the time of sentencing, including representations of the defendant and his counsel in regard to the nature and extent of Mr. Pollard’s cooperation. Moreover, Mr. Pollard understands that, while the Court may take his cooperation into account in determining whether or not to impose a sentence of life imprisonment, this agreement cannot and does not limit the court’s discretion to impose the maximum sentence.

    14

    The district court accepted Pollard’s plea at a hearing held on June 4, 1986. Chief Judge Robinson addressed Pollard in open court and questioned him about his understanding of the rights he was surrendering, including the potential sentences he faced and the terms of the plea agreement. After being assured by both Pollard and his attorney that there was no reason to be chary of the plea, the district court accepted it.

    15

    Sentencing took place nine months later. Both the government and Pollard submitted extensive pre-sentencing memoranda to the district judge. In general, the government argued that Pollard had done grievous damage to U.S. national security interests in the pursuit of financial reward and that Pollard was unremorseful and a continuing danger to national security. The government mentioned that Pollard had violated his plea agreement while in prison awaiting sentencing by giving several interviews to a journalist for the Jerusalem Post, Wolf Blitzer, without first submitting his comments to the Director of Naval Intelligence. This again, according to the government, demonstrated that Pollard could not be trusted to refrain from disclosing the various national secrets in his possession and that he still considered himself the best judge of when to follow rules that had been imposed upon him. In addition to its principal sentencing memoranda urging the district court to impose a substantial sentence, the government also submitted a highly classified declaration by Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger cataloguing the damage Pollard had done and opining that the damage had been “substantial and irrevocable.” The day before sentencing took place, Secretary Weinberger submitted an unclassified supplemental declaration in response to Pollard’s submissions that stated, in a rather polemical tone, the Secretary’s contentions.

    16

    In response to the government’s submissions, Pollard argued that he had done little damage to national security because the information he had misappropriated had been delivered to one of the United States’ closest allies. He denied that he had been motivated by greed, instead claiming that he had sought to aid Israel because he believed that his aid to Israel would also benefit United States’ security interests. He stressed the extent and value of his cooperation and the sincerity of his contrition. And he emphasized the special hardships prison life would impose on him and the psychological and emotional deterioration he had experienced during confinement.

    17

    After hearing oral allocution, the district judge sentenced Pollard to life in prison [295 U.S.App.D.C. 14] and Mrs. Pollard to five years.2 Pollard did not appeal but made a timely Rule 35 motion seeking to have his sentence reduced on the ground that it was disproportionate to the sentences received by other spies whose espionage was arguably more damaging to United States’ interests. He repeated the arguments he had made at sentencing and maintained in particular that the district court had failed to take proper account of his cooperation. The district court denied the motion, and Pollard did not appeal.

    Health,

    By the way, please show me a case, any case, where the defendant violates his plea agreement after pleading guilty, after having the plea accepted by the court, prior to sentencing and the guilty plea gets erased as a result of this? I cant imagine this ever happening, but if there is such a case I’d love to learn about it.

    #912891
    WolfishMusings
    Participant

    He now spends 23 hours a day locked up in a supermax prison.

    Actually, that’s not true. He’s incarcerated at Butner. Butner has two sections* — a low security prison and a medium security prison. Mr. Pollard is in the medium security prison. He is not in a Supermax prision (as, for example, Robert Hanssen, who is incarcerated at ADX Florence — the “maxest” Supermax prison in the Federal system).

    The Wolf

    * Yes, there’s also a hospital section at Butner — I’m not counting that.

    #912892
    JayMatt19
    Participant

    @wolf

    I was referring to Hanssen in regards to the supermax, not Pollard

    Please reread my post

    #912893
    WolfishMusings
    Participant

    @wolf

    I was referring to Hanssen in regards to the supermax, not Pollard

    Please reread my post

    You are correct. I mis-read your post.

    My apologies.

    The Wolf

    #912894
    Health
    Participant

    JayMatt -“@Health

    Try reading the official court documents, not the articles in the media. You might learn something”

    Look, I’m not a lawyer; but are you a lawyer or a law student?

    I’m not going to repeat my comment to you I made before, but you definitely are showing bias towards the Gov.’s side. What makes you think I just read the articles in the media that you so hauntingly claim? Maybe you should read all the legal documents in his defense before you boldy claim that the Gov. is right and his punishment was just? Ya’know many Goyim have come out publically that this is an injustice and they don’t even have a Chiyuv to be Dan s/o L’caf Zecus.

    From a former lawyer of Pollard’s:

    “6. The Government’s Breach of the Plea Agreement:

    You agree in your memorandum that there are “legitimate questions” regarding the government’s conduct at the time of sentencing in conjunction with its plea bargain. However, you selectively omit a full discussion of the issue and the pertinence of it to Mr. Pollard’s request for a commutation of his sentence.

    The fact is that the government violated its plea bargain with Mr. Pollard in several fundamental respects. Nearly everyone who has examined the circumstances agrees with that conclusion. Indeed, this situation was severely questioned by the federal appellate court that reviewed Mr. Pollard’s sentence. Despite the government’s agreement in exchange for Mr. Pollard’s plea of guilty to temper its rhetoric at the tide of sentencing, not to seek a life sentence, and to point out that Pollard’s cooperation with the government had been valuable, the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit found that the government had engaged in “hard-nosed dealings,” Pollard v. United States, 939 F.2d 10110, 1030, cert. denied, 113 S. Ct. 322 (1992), and that the government’s conduct was “problematic” and “troublesome.” Id. at 1026. Dissenting Judge Stephen Williams concluded that the government violated material terms of Mr. Pollard’s plea agreement, resulting in a “fundamental miscarriage of justice.” Id. at 1032. And the government’s forceful, bitter and antagonistic rhetoric produced the very life sentence it had agreed not to seek. Although the courts declined for technical reasons to set aside Mr. Pollard’s sentence, there are no such constraints on the President’s constitutional power to commute Mr. Pollard’s sentence and thereby to redress the injustice of a sentence of life in prison despite the government’s promise not to seek such a sentence.

    NJCRAC’s characterization of the facts is revealing. It says that Pollard’s claim of a government breach of the plea bargain is “not entirely a myth”. This is a very peculiar choice of words to describe an audacious, deliberate and manifest injustice.”

    #912895
    Health
    Participant

    The Wolf -“How could you possibly know this?

    If you’re not in the intelligence community, you could not possibly know the evidence that may or may not exist against Mr. Pollard.

    And if you are in the intelligence community (with knowledge of the case), you’re a fool for posting about it here on a public message board.”

    It’s funny that you’re calling me a fool. Usually you post with intelligence – this is not one of those times. I know this info because that is what the people defending Pollard claim -they have a web site where you can access this info. Google it.

    The people making this claim are legal experts that have seen all the evidence – all I did was repeat it over.

    That’s right I’m entitled to believe their claim even if I didn’t actually see all the evidence myself.

    #912896
    WolfishMusings
    Participant

    It’s funny that you’re calling me a fool

    Well, to be honest, I only called you a fool if you were in the intelligence community and posted about it, as it could be potentially damaging to your career. If you’re not (which is probably the case), then you don’t fit the condition of my statement (i.e. “If you’re in the intelligence community…”)

    That being said, I don’t know that his defense team saw all the evidence — I’d imagine that there’s quite a bit of classified material there. And if they did see it, they are probably bound by legal law not to discuss it in public (possibly making them fools if they did).

    The Wolf

    #912897
    Health
    Participant

    Wolf -“And if they did see it, they are probably bound by legal law not to discuss it in public (possibly making them fools if they did).”

    They did see it and they didn’t tell others what it is, just that the Gov. didn’t have a strong case. They know basic law and a lot more than that.

    #912898
    JayMatt19
    Participant

    @Health

    Look, I’m not a lawyer; but are you a lawyer or a law student?

    I’m not going to repeat my comment to you I made before, but you definitely are showing bias towards the Gov.’s side. What makes you think I just read the articles in the media that you so hauntingly claim? Maybe you should read all the legal documents in his defense before you boldy claim that the Gov. is right and his punishment was just? Ya’know many Goyim have come out publically that this is an injustice and they don’t even have a Chiyuv to be Dan s/o L’caf Zecus.

    So you can call me an anti-semite but I am not allowed to defend myself. You must be treated l’kaf zechus, but you don’t treat that way. Nice

    Let me get this straight, If I support your view then I am intelligent and all, but If I disagree with you then I am biased?

    Maybe you should read all the legal documents in his defense before you boldy claim that the Gov. is right and his punishment was just?…

    From a former lawyer of Pollard’s:

    Lawyers are paid to see things their clients way. Yes, I saw this, and I read this, but if you read the end of my link you will notice something, should you care (which I dont think you do, you want to believe Pollard is innocent, and you dont want to be convinced otherwise.)

    Pollard admitted guilt. He did so in open court. He had a lawyer present. When he pled he was told that the court need not accept the plea, even if the prosecution recommended a softer sentence. He accepted, he angered them, they backed out of their oral agreement to recommend a softer sentence (which the court was not obligated to give him).

    That is my point. To deny this would be to deny the facts of this case. The case I mentioned earlier was from his 1992 appeal. It starts with the background, his appeal, and the reason for its denial. You don’t need to be a law student to understand it, just someone with basic understanding of English

    NJCRAC’s characterization of the facts is revealing. It says that Pollard’s claim of a government breach of the plea bargain is “not entirely a myth”.

    I never said it was a myth. You claim the breach should have triggered a trial. I am telling you that you are wrong, and I showed you from his initial guilty plea that he very well knew that the court could accept his plea and ignore any recommendations from the gov’t

    For the record, I don’t want him in jail. I believe he is and has been treated unfairly and his lawyers did him no favors. As to why he has never filed a parole request, which he can do, I have no idea. But it bothers me when people who try to defend him/help him don’t know the facts in the case.

    But since you just see that there is a yid who disagrees with you, he must be a self hating antisemite who wants yidden to suffer, oh, and he is never dan l’kaf zechus.

    #1749619
    one man band
    Participant

    he is now free

    #1750028
    Yserbius123
    Participant

    Such a chillul Hashem. If all he did was give secrets to Israel, I would have been OK with it. But he sold the secrets, gave his then-wife other secrets to get an advantage in business, tried to sell them to Pakistan, and then went on Wolf Blitzer in direct violation of his parole. I honestly don’t understand why the frum oilom has such a thing for defending him.

    #1750106
    qsman
    Participant

    Yserbius123 is correct. Every Yid with a clearance and had access to that compartment fully agree that he gave away very serious stuff, and he should NOT be pardoned.. On court record he told the sentencing judge that “you have no power over me”.

    This also has prevented yidden who retired from DoD from obtaining consulting positions with the IDF and other Israeli military industries.

    The yentas running around have no clue what he did.

    #1750135
    🍫Syag Lchochma
    Participant

    “I honestly don’t understand why the frum oilom has such a thing for defending him.”
    pidyon shavuyim is a “thing” in Halacha. Reading details of a case in several media sources and then pretending we know the full story and then judging the person and acting negatively toward them based on that is an issur.

    Does that answer your question?

    #1750527
    Yserbius123
    Participant

    @🍫Syag Lchochma Not at all. I’ve been reading about him for years in the frum media, and not one article makes a defense for the things I mentioned. The failure to print the full story is on the frum oilom.

    Pidyan Shavuyin, according to most poskim, only applies in cases where the subject is arrested because of anti-Semitism or his/her life is in danger. Pollard directly violated the law and he was never in danger, just uncomfortable.

    #1752325
    besod emuna
    Participant

    “pidyon shavuyim is a “thing” in Halacha. Reading details of a case in several media sources and then pretending we know the full story and then judging the person and acting negatively toward them based on that is an issur.”

    In which case we should all similarly be fighting for the pidyon shavuyim of Nechemya Weberman. And certainly not badmouthing him.

    #1752326
    besod emuna
    Participant

    “Pidyan Shavuyin, according to most poskim, only applies in cases where the subject is arrested because of anti-Semitism or his/her life is in danger. Pollard directly violated the law and he was never in danger, just uncomfortable.”

    This isn’t an accurate description of when poskim hold Pidyan Shavuyin applies. It is much more inclusive and applies much more widely than you described.

    #1752423
    🍫Syag Lchochma
    Participant

    Assinine comparison

    #1752477
    fastensaul
    Participant

    His attorney was lebanese who intentionally missed the deadline to withdraw the plea bargain. This was a setup.
    Also, there was a former marine intelligence offiver, who gave information to the soviets. this resulted in several people’s deaths. his sentence wsd 3 1/2 years. so where is the justice.

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