
Something very sinister is unraveling right before our very eyes. In a stunning turn of events, in what should have been a slam dunk conviction instead turned into a circus act. Rabbi Yaakov Weiss literally ducked justice, or some would argue it ducked him.
Either way it's deeply insulting that an admitted child abuser cuts a deal sweeter than milk chocolate. And it's highly problematic to have prosecutors sworn to pursue justice pervert it so.
We all know pressure exerted by the Jewish Orthodox community can weigh down the mightiest, but by golly - why here?
The rational explanation to conclude is we're dealing with dirty lawmakers and politicians, who for their own personal gain and ulterior motives are perpetrating these ridiculous outcomes.
Any reasonable mind knows that 9 out of 10 times a person charged with such crimes will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law and be required to register as a sex offender. But no - not here. Go figure!
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I had to read the Jan. 12 story, "Rabbi takes a plea deal," twice to make sure that what I read the first time was correct. Why did prosecuters agree to a deal that allowed Rabbi Yaakov Weiss to plead guilty without having to register as a sex offender?
SUSAN BROWN
Loudonville
Read more: http://www.timesunion.com/AspStories/story.asp?storyID=889107&category=opinion#ixzz0chuwPBjJ
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http://blogs.villagevoice.com/runninscared/archives/2010/01/rubashkin_son-i.php
Rubashkin Son-In-Law Yaakov Weiss Pleads Guilty in Boy-Molest Case, But Avoids Sex-Offender Registry
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Yeah, pray you should!: The learned Yaakov Weiss, above, admitted to "... while naked, knowingly having inappropriate physical contact with a child, who was also naked at the time ..." |
Yaakov Weiss, a son-in-law of crooked Kosher-meat-mogul Sholom Rubashkin, has pleaded guilty to child endangerment in a boy-sex case in Albany. Weiss admitted that he got naked with a 13-year-old boy and had "inappropriate physical contact" with the child.
But the goniff worked out a plea deal and miraculously won't wind up on the sex-offender registry. Which means he can resume his career of working with children.
This despite the fact that he was indicted for full-on molestation: trying to hide his salami in (or at least rub it on) the butts of two boys while they were all taking a mikveh — a ritual bath that's supposed to purify one's soul but clearly didn't have the desired effect.
And Weiss skated despite the fact that he admitted telling one of the two boys he was charged with molesting to lie to his mother and to police.
Weiss, 29, is married to the eldest daughter of Rubashkin, and they had moved from the powerful family's Brooklyn stronghold to the Albany suburb Colonie to run a Hebrew academy. His father-in-law, meanwhile, sits in an Iowa prison awaiting sentencing after being convicted in November of financial fraud.
These crimes are not the reasons these Orthodox Jewish guys — in this case, powerful Chabadniks — wear black hats. But black hats these two schnooks do wear. Meanwhile, Weiss's wife helped lead a Chabad rally Sunday in Crown Heights in support of her convicted dad. The women-and-girls-only rally drew more than 1,000.
Jew-hating extremists — like the schmucks at Rebel News — are having a field day with this.===============================================================
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1142736.html
Why rabbis sin | |
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By Jeremy Rosen |
None of this is new; it has been going on for a very long time. But for someone as committed to Torah as I am, this phenomenon represents, far more than theological issues, the most serious of challenges to faith.
I am tired of making excuses. Once I would argue that 2,000 years of oppression, hatred and exclusion had taught the Jews to do whatever they needed to survive. Or, I would note that much of Orthodox Jewry nowadays is barely a generation removed from life in an Eastern Europe where the state was an enemy and everyone had to break the rules in order to evade the discriminatory regimes. In Israel, one could put the blame on David Ben-Gurion, for not having separated religion and state, which in effect encouraged the Orthodox to indulge in all the temptations that accompany political power.
But as with attempts to rationalize terrorism, you go through the obvious list of justifications - poverty, alienation, discrimination - and then you find perpetrators who have suffered none of the above. Daily, we Orthodox repeat mantras about justice, charity and kindness in our prayers, and the more we seem to spout them, the less many of us seem to pay any attention to translating the words into actions.
Catholicism might chalk it up to original sin, explaining that we are all corrupt by nature. Judaism, however, tells us that we are not necessarily evil, but influenced from birth by two inclinations, one to do the right thing and the other to do what is wrong, and we can give priority to one over the other. So why do so many of us ignore our own rules and standards? Is being religious, perhaps, just a social phenomenon, an accident of birth, a system of habit, norms and customs carried out without thought or spiritual significance? After all, even though observance is intended to promote moral behavior and allows for repentance, most people only pay lip service to that. Some people do change. But the vast majority are the same after Yom Kippur as they were the day before.
One could also argue that some people are simply genetically disposed to be more concupiscent, greedy and immoral than others, just as others seem to be more naturally saintly. We all struggle against our evil inclinations, and some people appear to have it easier than others.
But there are other factors at play here. Wherever you have a self-perpetuating oligarchy, its members come to see themselves as above the law. Just as a regime of men usually discriminates against women. This is why the unfair laws of divorce in Judaism have still not been modified to remove the disgrace of male chauvinists who can blackmail their wives over a get. When a majority of rabbis turn a blind eye, claiming they can do nothing, they are really encouraging the process of coercion, providing easy outs to the men while refusing to budge for the women. Add to that the superstition factor - and a tendency to attribute superhuman powers to certain rabbis, so that many then fear crossing them - and you have additional opportunities for corruption.
It may be true that every religion has a similar problem, but that's no excuse. I don't deny the goodness, charity and spirituality that do exist within Orthodoxy, but I am concerned about so many who let the side down, and an automatic tendency of authority to blame the messenger.
Considering how religions seem incapable or unwilling to police themselves, what is the solution? Shedding constant and consistent light on the murky recesses of religious corruption, I would sugest. Most humans behave far better when they think they are being observed. If rabbis who are charlatans, predators, thieves and hypocrites know they are likely to be exposed, they might think twice about what they do. As it is, though, Orthodoxy tends to protect them, claiming wrongly that exposure breaches the laws of gossip and lashon hara. Religious leadership tends to close ranks, often blaming the victims or exonerating the perpetrators. Recent ads in the Orthodox press even claim that those convicted of fraud are like "captives" who must be freed.
All closed groups behave this way, not only Orthodox Jews. This is precisely why Israel's Supreme Court is so unpopular with the Haredi world - and so necessary, because it will recognize no such defenses. It is why a free press, and now the Internet too, is so important, and why public opinion must not let even outwardly pious criminals get away with their wrongdoings. This is why a code of human rights must coexist alongside Torah. It shouldn't need to, since Torah requires justice and righteousness. But when we see the outwardly observant betraying their core values while Orthodoxy stands idly by, we need the checks and balances that a universal system of legal ethics mandates.
Jeremy Rosen is a rabbi and writer. He lives in New York and blogs at jeremyrosen.com/blog