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Israeli courts give free hand to Shin Bet

Lawyers specialized in human rights claim that ever since the kidnapping and murder of the three Israeli youths in June 2014, the Israeli judicial system is more lenient concerning the Israeli security apparatus' interrogation methods.
Tamir Pardo (L), head of Israel's spy agency Mossad, and Yoram Cohen, chief of Israel's Shin Bet internal security service, speak during a corner-stone laying ceremony for a memorial commemorating fallen soldiers on Mount Herzl military cemetery in Jerusalem April 30, 2014.  REUTERS/Ronen Zvulun (JERUSALEM - Tags: POLITICS) - RTR3N968
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It took Israeli security forces eight hours to locate Niv Asraf hiding in the environs of the Kiryat Arba settlement on the outskirts of Hebron, and to discover that the missing 22-year-old had staged his kidnapping April 2. His friend, Eran Negauker, a noncommissioned officer in the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), falsely reported to the police that, having experienced a malfunction in their car, Asraf had entered the Palestinian village of Beit Anun looking for tools to fix the problem, and never returned.

During the hours Asraf was supposedly “missing,” IDF forces conducted searches throughout Hebron — in the very same neighborhoods where Operation Brother's Keeper had been conducted 10 months prior in search for the three boys, Gil-Ad Shaer, Naftali Frenkel and Eyal Yifrach, who were kidnapped and murdered by a terrorist squad from the Hebron region in June 2014. Asraf was eventually found in a makeshift hideout, armed with canned food and a sleeping bag. At a news conference he later called, Asraf said he was involved in a conflict with criminal elements, and that’s why he had staged the kidnapping.

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