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DRAMATIC DEVELOPMENT: Palestinian Jailed For Assaulting 7-Year-Old Chareidi Girl Walks Free


In a dramatic turn of events surrounding the case of the brutal and violent assault against a 7-year-old chareidi girl, Mahmud Qadusa, suspected in the alleged assault was released from custody and the accusations against him withdrawn by the Military Advocate General. He spent 55 days in jail as the investigation continued.

The prosecution on Tuesday morning announced that it is dropping the indictment against Qadusa, the Palestinian school janitor employed in the victim’s school, who has been claiming his innocence since his arrest. Many believe that Qadusa is innocent, and there is even a teacher who provides an alibi for him, that they were together when the attack reportedly occurred.

Qadusa embraced his relatives as he was released from custody and immediately declared his innocence.

“I’m innocent! I know myself. I was telling them the entire time that I’m not that person.”

“For seven years I’ve worked in that (Chareidi) city….I have Jewish friends there. They know me. Ask them what they think of me.”

In the dramatic statement released by the prosecution on Tuesday morning, it states “After further examination of the investigation material, the military prosecutor decided, in accordance with the position of all the professionals involved in handling the case, that the evidentiary basis of the indictment does not support ‘a reasonable chance of conviction’ at this time. Therefore, the criminal procedure, and the indictment, must be withdrawn, and Katusa released from detention”.

The military prosecutor continues, “The police investigation will continue with greater force, both in terms of its status and in other directions, with the aim of conducting an exhaustive investigation and reaching the truth. As additional evidence that establishes a new indictment against Katusa or against others is gathered, the process will continue”.

According to the Judge Advocate General’s Office: “In the course of the investigation, evidence was gathered that reinforced the suspicions against Qadusa beyond the testimony of the minor, including certain identification procedures and matching between details provided by the minor as well as other findings”.

As for the change in the case after the filing of the indictment, it was stated: “In the concrete context before us, following the filing of the indictment, significant new information was received by the Israel Police, and in view of various arguments that arose which justified a reexamination of the evidence gathered at the basis of the indictment, the Judge Advocate General held a discussion with the head of the Investigations & Intelligence Division of the Israel Police, Major-General Gadi Siso, and the relevant officials in the Military Prosecution and the Israel Police.

“The Judge Advocate General also consulted with the State Attorney and senior officials, and at the end of the hearing it was decided, with the opinion of all of the participants, that there was room for completing the investigation, and after that it was proper to reevaluate the evidentiary basis of the indictment”.

Regarding the dramatic reversal of the indictment, it was said: “In addition, yesterday, the family of the minor updated her that she there was additional evidence, as well as ongoing investigative activity, including the taking of statements. At this stage, the results of these actions do not strengthen the evidentiary nature of the current proof against Qadusa”.

The Military Prosecutor’s Office adds: “All the participants believed that there was sufficient evidence that the minor was hurt, and there was a certain basis of evidence indicating that Katusa was involved in harming her, but they all believed that the case lacks sufficient evidence to establish an indictment against Qadusa.

“According to all, there is a need to continue the investigation, using all possible means and probing all directions, including against Qadusa as well as taking it to other directions”.

In conclusion: “The bottom line is that regarding the evidence that exists in the case, the completion of the investigation will take place and all evidence examined. The Judge Advocate General has decided the prosecutor has not yet formed a reasonable chance of convicting Qadusa, and therefore, the JAG decided to withdraw the indictment and allow Israel Police to continue completing the investigation.

(YWN Israel Desk – Jerusalem)



9 Responses

  1. I only have my information from what I read in the media. From when this story broke it was obvious this story had too many holes in it. I don’t think an assault ever happened, but if it did happen this guy was framed.

  2. It’s also possible that the girl was assaulted by someone she knows, and was lying to shield him/her. This is quite common in cases of child abuse. Or, the person threatened to kill her or her family if she spoke out, also a common occurrence. It is also possible that the child was making it up, either on her own or on an adult’s prompting. However, there are so many possibilities that the police are correct in continuing to investigate as thoroughly as possible.

  3. This sort of thing happens much more often than we hear about. Keep in mind that in Israel you can be detained without charge, denied the services of an attorney during questioning and, yes, questioned using “coercive measures.” In simple language, the Israeli police grab the “Arab most likely” off the street and squeeze a confession out of him/her. Whether he/she is the actual perpetrator is irrelevant; the crime is “solved” and another Arab is off the street. After all, they’re all guilty of something anyway, right, so who cares?

    Not unlike racist cops and courts in the old South.

    The only reason we know about this case is that the police bungled the frame-up so badly that they had no choice but to let him go.

    chareidi amiti: don’t just daven that the true perpetrator is brought to justice; daven for justice, period, including for those that have been falsely accused, convicted and imprisoned by the unjust zionist “justice” system.

  4. Children sometimes lie for many reasons (imagination/fantasy, drama, attention etc). This child lied. Imagine if she had said her teacher/principal/rabbi assaulted her…so easy to destroy a life simply on the words of an “innocent” child. True, most children say the truth, but there are some that do not.

  5. Rebbitzen Goldenpickanicerscreenname : yes children lie for all diff reasons but let’s get real most kids would not lie of getting raped especially a chhariedi 7-year-old who probably does not even know what that means. there must be more to the story then just a lie. i would be careful before choosing not to believe/

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