How Jewish American
pedophiles hide from justice in Israel
Ian Lee
Tel Aviv —
It's a tense stakeout, waiting for Jimmy Julius Karow to appear. He is a wanted
man and is considered dangerous. Accused of sexually assaulting a 9-year-old
girl in Oregon in 2000, he fled to Israel before authorities in the U.S. could
apprehend him or figure out where he went. Karow has been running from U.S. law
enforcement ever since. Currently INTERPOL, an inter-governmental
policing organization that works with 194 countries, has a Red Notice to alert
police worldwide that he's a fugitive.
Two years after he fled the U.S., Karow was convicted by an Israeli
court of child molestation in a separate case. He served time and was released.
Now another alleged Israeli victim has come forward, saying he began abusing
her when she was 5-years-old and continued for years.
Karow has successfully evaded authorities by moving between communities
in Israel for almost two decades, and he is not alone.
A widespread problem
A CBS News investigation has found that many accused American pedophiles
flee to Israel, and bringing them to justice can be difficult.
Jewish Community Watch (JCW), an American organization that tracks
accused pedophiles, has been trying for years to find Karow and help bring him
to justice.
JCW says Karow and other wanted men and women have been able to exploit
a right is known as the Law of Return, whereby any Jewish person can move to
Israel and automatically gain citizenship.
Since
the small organization started tracking accused pedophiles in 2014, it says
more than 60 have fled from the U.S. to Israel. Given its limited resources to
identify these individuals, JCW says the actual number is likely much larger.
"The same thing that is going on in
the Catholic Church right now around the world, the exact same thing is
happening in our community," JCW's founder Meyer Seewald told CBS News.
"The cover-ups are the same, the stigma, the shame."
Seewald says tightly-knit Jewish
communities across the U.S. will sometimes meet accusations against a member
with incredulity, and that can have a chilling effect.
"Everyone goes and surrounds this
individual and supports him because they can't believe a person can do such a
crime. They take the abuser's side and the abuse continues," Seewald says.
"They put him in another community. A few years later, he's done the same
thing and we hear more allegations that the person is abusing children. Victims
don't want to come forward when they see that."
JCW says the majority of its cases
originate from modern Orthodox to Ultra-orthodox Jewish enclaves in the U.S.,
but that it happens across the wider Jewish community. Because perpetrators
can't be held accountable unless victims come forward, many cases are believed
to go unreported. To try to get them out into the light, JCW holds awareness
events across the U.S. and offers victims of sexual abuse advice and emotional
support.
Mendy Hauck decided to come forward
after receiving support from JCW. The father of two says he was just
8-years-old when he was molested by a teacher at his Orthodox Jewish School in
Los Angeles. Hauck says the abuse started one day when a friend brought in
cookies for his birthday.
"I
actually went ahead and reached for the biggest cookie and he said, 'Put it
back and you could come back by recess and get your cookie,'" Hauck said.
"So after he handed out the rest of the cookies to the other classmates, I
had to stay behind if I wanted my cookie, and I did. He called me up to his
desk... and that's when he started... rubbing me."
His alleged abuser is Mordechai Yomtov,
a then-35-year-old Hebrew teacher.
"I jumped backward like a step or
two and he grabbed my hair and said, 'it's fine, you can come close. I won't
hurt you. There is nothing wrong,' and he did it again," Hauck recalls.
Hauck says the abuse continued over the course of the year. He says he felt trapped, with nowhere to turn.
When the year finished, Hauck moved on
to the next grade. That's when Yomtov's crimes caught up to him. In 2001,
police arrested and charged him with committing lewd acts with three of his
other students, ranging in age from 8 to 10. But Hauck never told anyone about
his ordeal until years later.
Yomtov eventually pled guilty, served
time in jail and was released on probation. But once free, he violated his
probation by fleeing to Israel via Mexico.
JCW tracked him down and confronted him
in Jerusalem with a hidden camera. Yomtov admitted that he violated his
probation and illegally fled the United States, with help. He also said that in
Mexico he obtained a fake passport in order to travel to Israel, where he lives
illegally.
Yomtov denied abusing Hauck, but offered
a general apology to his victims, saying: "I'm very, very sorry. I hope
that God will help every single person who went through this. Please forgive
me."
It wasn't until 2016, when another
alleged victim of Yomtov and friend of Hauck's came forward, that Hauck felt
compelled to tell his story. He filed a police report hoping to get justice but says the processes has been slow. For him, justice is twofold.
"I want the (LA County District
Attorney) to step up their game — you know, actually fight to get him back here
and give him what he deserves," he says. "And also, I want the
communities to make sure this doesn't happen again."
The district attorney's office told CBS News there has been no request
to extradite Yomtov back to the United States and declined any further
comment.
Red flags, more victims
Help from the community is a reoccurring theme. Rabbi Yehuda Oppenheimer
knows first-hand how a pedophile is able to flee to Israel. In 2000, he
unwittingly helped Karow escape.
The two met when Karow expressed interest in converting to Judaism. One
day, Karow suddenly said he wanted to move to Israel.
When asked whether there was nothing at all that raised red flags up to
the point when Karow said he wanted to move to Israel, Rabbi Oppenheimer
responded: "I wish I could say that [it didn't raise any red flags], but
unfortunately, I can't… He [Karow] said, 'I plan to go to Israel, I need to go
much more quickly than I thought I needed to go."
"He said that there was something in the past that happened when he
was young but nothing had ever happened since. I felt that I could trust him.
So I wrote him a letter, he bought a ticket and he left."
Oppenheimer gave Karow the contact information of family and friends in
Israel to help him settle. Then one day a close friend called the rabbi.
"I'll never know exactly what happened but something severely
sexual… something happened with their daughter, and [Karow] was arrested."
Oppenheimer says it felt like "a punch to the gut. It was very
painful."
He
says he carries that guilt to this day, and that's why he came forward with his
story. He has a message for other rabbis and community leaders:
"When somebody has offended in this
way, the odds are that they will do so again, no matter how kind and pious and
wise and nice and charismatic they are," Oppenheimer says. "You
simply can't trust them. You have to take steps to prevent, you cannot have
them around youngsters, you cannot have them in your home."
One of the girls Karow allegedly abused
in Israel is "Amoona." She asked us not to use her real name, to
protect her family.
"I was 5, 4 or 5 years old. My
mother was on bed rest. My father is a rabbi so he wasn't home. (Karow) used to
come to our house. We used to play games and then it became sexual."
The alleged abuse took place over the
course of more than two years. A July 2019, Israeli indictment against
him details allegations of severe sexual abuse, including rape and sodomy.
She says he would threaten and manipulate her to keep her quiet.
"' I'm going to give you a cookie
because you do it so nicely.' It's all about the cookie it's all about lying
and it's all about being so evil to a little child," Amoona recalls him
telling her. "He also threatened and to kill my parents. He would choke
me. He would hold me."
Inaction, even protection?
Amoona is angry that Karow was allowed to enter Israel in the first
place, but JCW's chief operating officer Shana Aaronson says the failure begins
in the United States. She says there are elements of the Jewish community in
the U.S. that are willing to help pedophiles escape.
"Oftentimes
there's some sort of community incentive, either somebody owes them a favor or
someone in the community, let's say an institution, has covered up for them in
the past and they know that if this goes to court there's a lot of civil
liability coming down the line," she says.
While Aaronson puts blame on Jewish communities
in the U.S. and the U.S. government for not aggressively pursuing extraditions,
she says Israeli authorities have also failed to prioritize the hunt for
suspects.
She tells CBS News it would be easier
for the police to locate and arrest Karow, for instance, but it has fallen
instead on the JCW to track him down.
Israel is known as a nation on the
cutting edge of technology, but Shana says that it doesn't trickle down to local
law enforcement. Shana says police don't request background checks of
perpetrators arrested in Israel who have recently moved there from other countries.
They don't even do a Google search, she says.
"The general standards and
protocols for investigations by local police are poor," she says.
JCW says the problem reaches into the
upper echelons of Israeli politics as well. They note that Yaakov Litzman,
leader of an ultra-orthodox alliance in Israel's legislature and the current
Minister of Health has been accused of preventing the deportation of a Malka
Leifer, a former headteacher at a Jewish school in Australia, where she is
wanted on multiple charges of child sexual abuse.
CBS
News obtained an Israeli police recommendation that says there is enough
evidence against Litzman to recommend he be charged himself with fraud and
breach of trust for protecting Leifer. Litzman's office told CBS News there was
not any wrongdoing. It's now up to Israel's attorney general to decide whether
to indict the lawmaker.
"It's a good example of the lengths
the community will go," JCW's Aaronson says. "It's really
disappointing and disgusting."
Israeli police wouldn't comment on
specific cases but insist they take the cases seriously, and that they
coordinate "closely with the Ministry of Justice and worldwide police
organizations in order to find suspects overseas."
The U.S. Department of Justice declined
to comment on specific cases too but praised their relationship with Israel's
law enforcement, adding sex offenders have been successfully extradited in the
past.
The stakeout
On the day of the stakeout, JCW received its best tip in months — that
Karow was going to be at a clinic in Tel Aviv. They know he is 6'2" and
over 200 pounds, but he could have changed his appearance, and previous
attempts to capture him have failed.
"Obviously the fear is that he'll figure out that someone is
looking for him and he'll bolt," Aaronson says, clutching an old photo of
JCW's target.
An ambulance pulls up and a man steps out with a bandaged right arm. He
fits the description of Karow. Aaronson's team confirms his identity and calls
the police.
Within five minutes a police officer on a motorcycle arrives and they
move in to make the arrest.
Karow is brought out by two officers. He doesn't look surprised to be in
custody. We ask him if he assaulted a girl in the United States.
"No," he replies. He denies fleeing to Israel but doesn't
answer when asked if he assaulted girls in that country. He says he knows he's
wanted under an international arrest warrant.
Karow now faces charges in both Israel and the U.S.
The District Attorney's office in Clackamas County, Oregon, told CBS
News it was "working with federal authorities to secure his
extradition."
Outside the clinic, Aaronson calls Amoona to share the news of Karow's
capture. In Israel, victims are allowed to confront alleged offenders before
trial. Amoona brought a box of the same cookies Karow used to manipulate her,
to throw back at him.
"It was good to confront him," she says. "To have that
closure in my life."
Meanwhile, Mordechai Yomtov remains at large.
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