Israeli Mafia operates freely in America
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   C O R R E C T E D  C O P Y (CORRECTED ADDEE)    DEPT FOR CA/VO/L/C; CA/VO/L/A; CA/FPP SARAH SEXTON; INR/TIPOFF; DS  OFAC  ROME FOR DHS/ICE    CA/FPP: PLEASE PASS TO DOJ LISA HOLTYN AND BRUCE OHR  SIPDIS    E.O. 12958:N/A  TAGS: CVIS SNAR CMGT KFRD KCOR KCRM KTIP PINR IS SUBJECT: ISRAEL: A PROMISED LAND FOR ORGANIZED CRIME?    Summary  ---------    ¶1.  (SBU) Organized crime (OC) has longstanding roots in Israel, but 
in recent years there has been a sharp increase in the reach and 
impact of OC networks.  In  seeking a competitive advantage in such lucrative trades as narcotics  and prostitution, Israeli crime groups have demonstrated their ability  and willingness to engage in violent attacks on each other with little  regard for innocent bystanders. The Israeli National Police (INP) and the courts have engaged in a 
vigorous campaign against organized crime leaders, including the 
creation of a new specialized anti-OC unit, but they remain unable 
to cope with the full scope of the problem.  Organized crime in 
Israel now has global reach, with direct impact inside the United 
States.   Post  is currently utilizing all available tools to deny Israeli OC figures  access to the United States in order to prevent them from furthering  their criminal activities on U.S. soil.  End Summary. 
Crime War Hits the Streets of Israel  -------------------------------------    ¶2.  (SBU) In November 2008, Israeli crime boss Yaakov Alperon was  assassinated in broad daylight in a gruesome attack on the streets  of Tel Aviv, only about a mile away from the Embassy.  According to  several media accounts, a motor scooter pulled up alongside  Alperon's car and the rider attached a sophisticated explosive  device with a remote detonator to the car door.  The bomb killed  Alperon and his driver, and injured two innocent pedestrians.  The  hit was the latest in a series of violent attacks and reprisals, and  indicated a widening crime war in Israel.    ¶3.  In July 2008, a 31-year-old Israeli woman was killed by a stray  bullet on the beach in Bat Yam in front of her husband and two  children during a failed assassination attempt on noted crime figure  Rami Amira.  In a feud between the Abutbul and Shirazi clans, crime  boss Shalom "Charlie" Abutbul was shot by two gunmen in September  2008, an attack that also wounded three bystanders.  In December  2008, Charlie Abutbul's son-in-law, Nati Ohayon, was gunned down in  his car in Netanya.  Before the fatal bombing of his car, Alperon  himself had survived at least three previous attempts on his life  before his assassination, and was engaged in an ongoing feud with  the rival Abergil clan (although there are numerous suspects in  Alperon's murder).  The day after Alperon's death, two members of  the Abergil syndicate were sentenced for conspiring to kill  Alperon's brother, Nissim, in May 2008.    ¶4.  (SBU) In response to rising concerns for public safety, former  Prime Minister Olmert convened an emergency meeting of top law  enforcement officials, cabinet members, and prosecutors in December  2008.  He promised to add 1,000 officers to the INP and to allocate  approximately NIS 340 million (USD 81 million) to improve the INP's  technical capabilities.  In general, the rise in OC-related violence  has led some public figures to call for emergency state powers to  attack criminal organizations, and OC became a minor but important  issue in the February 2009 Knesset elections. Former Labor Party MK  Ephraim Sneh publicly decried criminal extortion in his campaign  ads, only to have his car torched in apparent retaliation outside  his home in Herzliya.    Background  ------------    ¶5.  (SBU) Organized criminal activity is not a new phenomenon in  Israel, and major crime families are well known to the Israeli  public (the Alperons even featured in a recent reality television  program).  Five or six crime families have traditionally dominated  OC in Israel, although the names and makeup of these syndicates have  fluctuated in recent years.  The Abergil, Abutbul, Alperon, and  Rosenstein organizations are among the most well known, but recent  arrests and assassinations have created a power vacuum at the top.  New names such as Mulner, Shirazi, Cohen and Domrani have moved  quickly to fill the gap.  Other up-and-coming groups include the  Harari, Ohana, and Kdoshim families.  There are also a number of  rival families active in the underworld of Israel's Arab sector.    ¶6.  (SBU) Traditional OC activities in Israel include illegal  neighborhood casinos, prostitution rings, extortion, and loan  sharking, with each family controlling a different geographic  region.  The Alperon family, for instance, dominates the Sharon  region, while the Abutbul operation is based in the coastal city of  Netanya.   The focus is largely on easy money guaranteed by the  limited use of violence.  Criminal involvement in the recycling  business, for example, has been well covered in the press.  OC    families collect bottles illegally from municipal recycling bins and  restaurants, return them at the collection centers claiming twice  the actual numbers, and pocket the change for millions in profits.    Not Your Grandfather's Mob  ---------------------------    ¶7.  (SBU) Despite their notoriety, OC figures have generally been  viewed as a nuisance to be handled by local police.  Law enforcement  resources were directed to more existential security threats from  terrorists and enemy states.  In recent years, however, the rules of  the game have changed.  According to Yaakov Lappin of the Jerusalem  Post, the old school of Israel OC is giving way to a new, more  violent, breed of crime.  Lappin told conoffs that the new style of  crime features knowledge of hi-tech explosives acquired from service  in the Israeli Defense Forces, and a willingness to use  indiscriminate violence, at least against rival gang leaders.  New  OC business also includes technology-related crimes, such as stock  market and credit card fraud, and operates on a global scale.    ¶8.  (SBU) As the reach of Israeli OC has grown, so have the stakes.  Crime families are working further from home and exporting violence  abroad.  Older gambling schemes have grown to include sprawling  casino franchises in Eastern Europe.  The Abutbul family began its  gambling business in Romania over a decade ago, and now owns the  Europe-wide Casino Royale network.  In 2002, Israeli OC turf wars  spilled into Europe when Yaakov Abergil and Felix Abutbul were  killed two months apart.  Abutbul was gunned down in front of his  casino in Prague in a show of force by the Abergils as they  attempted to capture a portion of the European gambling market.    ¶9.  (SBU) Israeli OC now plays a significant role in the global drug  trade, providing both a local consumer market and an important  transit point to Europe and the United States.  In 2004, Zeev  Rosenstein was arrested in Israel for possession of 700,000 ecstasy  tablets in his New York apartment, destined for distribution in the  U.S. market.  He was ultimately extradited to the United States in  2006, where he is currently serving a 12-year prison sentence.  Two  other crime figures, Meir Abergil and Israel Ozifa, are also facing  U.S. extradition charges on charges that include smuggling 100,000  ecstasy tablets into the United States.    ¶10.  (SBU) The prostitution business has also grown beyond the  neighborhood brothel.  In March 2009, the INP arrested twelve  suspects in what is believed to be the largest Israeli-led human  trafficking network unearthed to date.  Ring leader Rami Saban and  his associates were charged with smuggling thousands of women from  the former Soviet Union and forcing them to work as prostitutes in  Israel, Cyprus, Belgium, and Great Britain.  Some women were flown  to Egypt and smuggled across the Sinai border by Bedouins.    Law Enforcement Steps up the Pressure  -------------------------------------    ¶11.  (SBU) After years of perceived inaction, in 2008 the INP  created a new unit called Lahav 433.  The elite unit operates under  the direct command of the police commissioner, and is charged  specifically with infiltrating and eliminating Israel's major crime  syndicates.  Lahav 433 also cooperates closely with district  investigative units to combat smaller criminal organizations, many  of which are aligned with the larger crime families.    ¶12.  (SBU) Following Alperon's assassination, the INP initiated a  series of raids that led to the arrests of a number of leading crime  figures.  Among their targets were Aviv and Adam Abutbul, sons of  crime-family head Charlie Abutbul, both charged with possession of  illegal weapons.  (A third brother, Francois, is already facing  murder charges for a nightclub killing in 2004.)  Police also  arrested gangland figure Amir Mulner for weapons possession and  conspiracy to commit a crime.  Mulner is known to be an explosives  expert by army training, and is a suspect in Yaakov Alperon's  murder.  He is also believed to be managing affairs for Rosenstein  while the latter serves his sentence in the United States.    ¶13.  (SBU) Yaakov Alperon's brother Nissim was arrested with 18  others in December 2008, in what was reported to be a "mafia  meeting" in a Tel Aviv-area caf.  According to the Jerusalem Post,  the group may have been planning a revenge attack for his brother's  recent assassination.  Alperon's son Dror, recently dismissed from  his army service for disorderly behavior, also faces several counts  of assault and was convicted on extortion charges.  Also in  December, police in Netanya launched several raids on illegal  gambling houses and the homes of suspected money launderers with  ties to the crime families.  In Ashdod, brothers Roni and David  Harari were arrested on charges of extortion.  Regional police stuck  a blow against the Jerusalem Gang, and convicted its leader Itzik  Bar Muha.    Skepticism Hovers Over GOI Efforts  ----------------------------------    ¶14.  (SBU) Journalist Yuval Goren of Ha'aretz told conoffs that  "thousands of foot soldiers" remain active on the streets despite  these aggressive anti-OC operations.  He noted that approximately  2,000 people attended Alperon's very public funeral.  Goren  expressed skepticism that recent arrests will bear fruit in the long  term without a sustained commitment to enforcement.  He noted that  many of the crime leaders remain active while in prison and their  operations are not hampered significantly even when they are  convicted and jailed.    ¶15.  (SBU) In December 2008, former Prime Minister Olmert himself  admitted that efforts to combat OC have long been diluted among  different agencies, and that INP technology lags far behind that  allocated to security services for counterterrorism.  Given the  recent change in government and the current economic crisis, there  is public skepticism as to whether GOI promises to remedy the  situation will be fulfilled.  In 2003, following a failed  assassination attempt on Rosenstein, then Prime Minister Ariel  Sharon made similar promises to commit manpower and resources to  combating the problem.    ¶16.  (SBU) It is not entirely clear to what extent OC elements have  penetrated the Israeli establishment and corrupted public officials.   The INP insists that such instances are rare, despite the  occasional revelation of crooked police officers in the press.  Nevertheless, there have been several dramatic revelations in recent  years that indicate a growing problem.  In 2004, former government  minister Gonen Segev was arrested for trying to smuggle thousands of  ecstasy pills into Israel, a case that produced considerable  circumstantial evidence of his involvement in OC.  The election of  Inbal Gavrieli to the Knesset in 2003 as a member of Likud raised  concerns about OC influence in the party's Central Committee.  Gavrieli is the daughter of a suspected crime boss, and she  attempted to use her parliamentary immunity to block investigations  into her father's business.  (Gavrieli is no longer a member of the  Knesset.)  Just last month, Israeli politicos and OC figures came  together for the funeral of Likud party activist Shlomi Oz, who  served time in prison in the 1990s for extortion on behalf of the  Alperon family.  Among those in attendance was Omri Sharon, son of  former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, who was himself convicted in  2006 on illegal fundraising charges unrelated to OC.    Courts Testing New Powers  --------------------------    ¶17.  (SBU) In 2003, the GOI passed anti-OC legislation that carries  a maximum sentence of 10 years imprisonment for heading a criminal  organization and three years for working in such an organization.  The law defines such a body as a group of people working in an  "organized, methodical and ongoing pattern to commit offenses that  are defined by the laws of Israel as crimes."  The law also allows  for property forfeiture, both in the wake of conviction and in cases  where it is proven to belong to a criminal organization.    ¶18.  (SBU) Until recently, said Lappin, judges and lawyers have been  slow to make use of this authority, and are hampered by a lack of  resources, insufficient understanding of the tools at their  disposal, and reticence to mete out tough sentences.  A witness  protection program for those who testify against OC is just now  getting off the ground, and is not backed by any specific  legislation.  Nevertheless, on March 16th, a Tel Aviv district court  took the important step of sentencing 14 convicted criminals  belonging to two mob organizations in Ramle and Jaffa to up to 27  years in prison.    ¶19.  (SBU) Increased efforts by Israeli authorities to combat OC  have engendered retaliatory threats of violence.  Recent press  reports indicate that as many as 10 Israeli judges are currently  receiving 24-hour protection by the police against the threat of  violence from members of crime organizations.  Israeli OC appears to  be intent on intimidating judges personally, as a way of influencing  the legal process.  Judges in Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, and Haifa have  been assigned police protection, underscoring the depth of the  problem.    Israeli Crime Reaches American Shores  --------------------------------------    ¶20.  (SBU) Israel's multi-ethnic population provides a deep well of  opportunity for Israeli OC to expand into new territory.  Most  Israeli crime families trace their roots to North Africa or Eastern  Europe, and many of their Israeli operatives hold foreign passports  allowing them to move freely in European countries, most of which  participate in the visa waiver program with the United States.  Approximately one million Russians moved to Israel following the  dissolution of the Soviet Union, and Russian citizens no longer  require visas to enter Israel.  Many Russian oligarchs of Jewish  origin and Jewish members of OC groups have received Israeli  citizenship, or at least maintain residences in the country.  Little  is known about the full extent of Russian criminal activity in  Israel, but sources in the police estimate that Russian OC has  laundered as much as USD 10 billion through Israeli holdings.  While  most Israeli OC families are native-born and the stereotype that  Russian immigrants tend to be mobsters is greatly overblown,  indigenous OC groups routinely employ "muscle" from the former  Soviet Union.    ¶21.  (SBU) The profit motive serves as a great unifier among  Israel's diverse demographic groups.  According to Goren, some  Amsterdam-based Hasidic groups allegedly are implicated in  international drug smuggling through links to Israeli OC.  Arab and  Jewish Israeli criminals routinely cooperate and form alliances to  expand control of lucrative drug, car theft and extortion rackets.  Even hostile and closed borders pose few obstacles to OC groups.  According to the INP, 43% of intercepted heroin in 2008 was smuggled  from Lebanon, 37% from Jordan, and 12% from Egypt.    Israeli OC Operating Freely in United States  ---------------------------------------------    ¶22.  (SBU) Given the volume of travel and trade between the United  States and Israel, it is not surprising that Israeli OC has also  gained a foothold in America.  Over the last decade, media reports  have detailed a number of high-profile cases involving Israeli OC,  ranging from large-scale drug deals to murder.  The ongoing Central  District of California grand jury investigation against the Abergil  family, where a RICO conspiracy case was initiated in December 2007,  best demonstrates the full extent of such criminal activity.  Investigators have linked Yitzhak Abergil and his entire network to  crimes of "embezzlement, extortion, kidnapping, and money  laundering."  Yitzhak Abergil is currently under arrest in Israel  and facing extradition for related charges linking him to the murder  of Israeli drug dealer Samy Attias on U.S. soil.    ¶23.  (SBU) As part of an ongoing effort to track Israeli OC through  media reports and police sources, Post so far has identified 16  families and 78 related individuals who are at the center of Israeli  organized criminal activity.  The consular section has revoked  several visas for those who have been convicted of crimes in Israel,  but many OC figures have no prior criminal convictions and carry no  visa ineligibilities.  As a result, many hold valid nonimmigrant  visas to the United States and have traveled freely or attempted to  travel for a variety of purposes.    ¶24.  (SBU) In March 2009, Post received information from law  enforcement authorities that convicted criminal and member of the  Abergil organization, Mordechai Yair Hasin, along with his pregnant  wife and child, was intending to flee Israel for Los Angeles on  valid tourist visas.  Hasin's visa was revoked based on his  conviction, as were his family's visas after they were determined to  be intending immigrants.    ¶25.  (SBU) As in the Hasin case, Post is using every available tool  to limit OC travel to the United States, but such efforts are not  always successful.  In June 2008, Post issued Adam Abitbul a valid  tourist visa.  Abitbul had no prior criminal convictions, and  carried no visa ineligibilities.  Several months later, Post  received information from the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD)  that he had traveled to the United States to carry out a hit.  Abitbul returned to Israel prematurely for his father's funeral, at  which time Post revoked his visa. (Post can only revoke the visas of  Israeli citizens while in country.)  In a similar case, in October  2008 Post issued Moshe Bar Muha a tourist visa; he claimed to be  traveling for medical treatment.  Post subsequently received  information from the LAPD that Bar Muha is in fact the brother of  Itzik Bar Muha of the Jerusalem Gang (see above) and a convicted  criminal.    ¶26.  (SBU) As recently as March 2009, Zvika Ben Shabat, Yaacov  Avitan, and Tzuri Rokah requested visas to attend a  "security-related convention" in Las Vegas.  According to local  media reports, all three had involvement with OC.   Post asked the  applicants to provide police reports for any criminal records in  Israel, but without such evidence there is no immediate  ineligibility for links to OC.  Luckily, all three have so far  failed to return for continued adjudication of their applications.  Nevertheless, it is fair to assume that many known OC figures hold  valid tourist visas to the United States and travel freely.    Comment:  Israeli OC Slipping Through the Consular Cracks  --------------------------------------------- ---------    ¶27.  (SBU) Given the growing reach and lethal methods of Israeli OC,  blocking the travel of known OC figures to the United States is a  matter of great concern to Post.  Through collaboration with Israeli  and U.S. law enforcement authorities, Post has developed an  extensive database and placed lookouts for OC figures and their foot  soldiers.   Nevertheless, the above visa cases demonstrate the  challenges that have arisen since the termination of the Visas Shark  in September 2008.  Unlike OC groups from the former Soviet Union,  Italy, China, and Central America, application of INA  212(a)(3)(A)(ii) against Israeli OC is not specifically authorized  per Foreign Affairs Manual 40.31 N5.3.  As such, Israelis who are  known to work for or belong to OC families are not automatically  ineligible for travel to the United States.    CUNNINGHAM