Security16:20 · 39m ago

Israeli Intelligence Officer Cleared After Harsh Detention Over Shin Bet Failures Report

Now 14Right
Translated & summarized from Now 14 by baba
The story · English

An Israeli intelligence officer, identified only as Lieutenant Colonel Y, who exposed serious failures by the Shin Bet security service related to the October 7 massacre, has been cleared of all charges. The case against him was closed due to lack of evidence, according to attorney Efraim Damari, who revealed the development on the "Riklin & Partners" program. The officer had been arrested violently and subjected to harsh interrogation and alleged torture in Shin Bet detention cells.

Lieutenant Colonel Y authored a detailed report within the Military Intelligence Directorate (AMAN) that factually demonstrated Shin Bet's preventable lapses leading to the October 7 tragedy. Following the submission of this report, he faced intense persecution by the security establishment. His arrest occurred while he was on vacation with his wife at a hotel in Eilat, where ten masked Shin Bet agents stormed his room at 5 a.m., detaining him with excessive force.

During his 11-day detention, the officer was handcuffed, blindfolded with a cloth, denied access to legal counsel, and reportedly endured severe physical and psychological abuse. His wife, Coral, recounted the traumatic arrest experience, describing the agents’ initial refusal to identify themselves and the fear they instilled, recalling, "We thought they came to kill us."

Attorney Damari highlighted the rarity of closing a case on grounds of innocence, sarcastically noting the system’s apology to the officer while placing the blame squarely on Shin Bet. The program host, Shimon Riklin, emphasized that this is not the first time internal whistleblowers have caused embarrassment within Israel’s security apparatus. The officer’s ordeal underscores ongoing tensions between security agencies and those who expose their failures.

The closure of the case marks a significant vindication for Lieutenant Colonel Y, but also raises questions about accountability and transparency within Israel’s intelligence community following the devastating events of October 7.

Read the original at Now 14
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