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Started By
Message
Posted on 8/18/25 at 7:35 am to Burt Reynolds
quote:
So this is what you wanted SDVtiger?
What the frick are you babbling about?
What with the obsession with me
Posted on 8/18/25 at 7:40 am to Burt Reynolds
This is literally like in the movies when the protagonist tells the cops they're about to get a phone call. Tom Cruise has had 2 similar scenes, even.
Lord of War
Lord of War
Posted on 8/18/25 at 8:26 am to Burt Reynolds
quote:POTUS Trump's support for Israel is very strong. Isn't his own daughter Jewish? Some of his grandchildren also Jewish?
Trump also helped secure his release.
Trump will always support Israel unconditionally.
Posted on 8/18/25 at 8:28 am to Champagne
quote:
POTUS Trump's support for Israel is very strong. Isn't his own daughter Jewish? Some of his grandchildren also Jewish?
Trump will always support Israel unconditionally.
Can we maybe do that and not protect pedophiles in the process?
Posted on 8/18/25 at 8:31 am to billjamin
quote:quote:
Israel loves them some child molesters.
And the us govt loves protecting them. Sads.
I upvote this FWIW.
Posted on 8/18/25 at 9:39 am to Champagne
Molesters
Are
Granted
Amnesty
Are
Granted
Amnesty
Posted on 8/18/25 at 9:40 am to Burt Reynolds
Morons
Are
Generally
Annoying
Are
Generally
Annoying
Posted on 8/18/25 at 10:00 am to Burt Reynolds
Trump has pardoned Kushner's dad, real estate ponzi schemer Eli Weinstein (who is again in legal trouble for ponzi scheming), "Meth Messiah' Sholom Rubashkin, commuted the sentence of nuke spy Jonathan Pollard and has now helped this guy escape justice.
I'm getting a LOT of good things from Trump. I do mean that, but this ain't one of them.
I'm getting a LOT of good things from Trump. I do mean that, but this ain't one of them.
This post was edited on 8/18/25 at 10:22 am
Posted on 8/18/25 at 2:36 pm to Toomer Deplorable
Under the principle of diplomatic immunity, the ability of the US to hold a foreign visiting official on a crime is limited. Here's a breakdown:
-Diplomats and their families generally cannot be arrested or prosecuted by US courts. This immunity ensures they can perform their diplomatic duties without fear of harassment or coercion from the host country.
-Consular officials have more limited immunity and can be arrested and prosecuted for certain serious crimes, specifically felonies, and if the arrest is made pursuant to a warrant or similar judicial authority. This is especially true for acts performed outside their official functions.
- The sending state (the diplomat's home country) can waive diplomatic immunity for their officials. This often happens when the official is suspected of a serious crime not related to their diplomatic role.
-The US government can declare a diplomat "persona non grata" (unwelcome) and expel them from the country. This is a more likely outcome than prosecution if the sending state refuses to waive immunity.
-Diplomatic immunity does not mean diplomats are above the law or have a license to commit crimes. They are expected to respect US laws and regulations.
-Police can take actions to prevent imminent danger or public safety concerns, even involving diplomats. This might include stopping them for reckless driving, for example.
-Diplomats and their families generally cannot be arrested or prosecuted by US courts. This immunity ensures they can perform their diplomatic duties without fear of harassment or coercion from the host country.
-Consular officials have more limited immunity and can be arrested and prosecuted for certain serious crimes, specifically felonies, and if the arrest is made pursuant to a warrant or similar judicial authority. This is especially true for acts performed outside their official functions.
- The sending state (the diplomat's home country) can waive diplomatic immunity for their officials. This often happens when the official is suspected of a serious crime not related to their diplomatic role.
-The US government can declare a diplomat "persona non grata" (unwelcome) and expel them from the country. This is a more likely outcome than prosecution if the sending state refuses to waive immunity.
-Diplomatic immunity does not mean diplomats are above the law or have a license to commit crimes. They are expected to respect US laws and regulations.
-Police can take actions to prevent imminent danger or public safety concerns, even involving diplomats. This might include stopping them for reckless driving, for example.
Posted on 8/18/25 at 2:39 pm to billjamin
quote:
Maybe one day we can have a government that cares about protecting children from predators.
No need to be full of shite billjamin.
quote:
May 7, 2025
Justice Department Announces Results of Operation Restore Justice: 205 Child Sex Abuse Offenders Arrested in FBI-Led Nationwide Crackdown
quote:
– Leonidas Varagiannis, also known as “War,” 21, a citizen of the United States residing in Thessaloniki, Greece, and Prasan Nepal, also known as “Trippy,” 20, of North Carolina, were arrested and charged for operating an international child exploitation enterprise known as “764,” a nihilistic violent extremist (NVE) network. Varagiannis was arrested yesterday in Greece; Nepal was arrested on April 22, 2025, in North Carolina and had a court appearance. Court hearings in Washington, D.C. are pending for both defendants.
The charges were announced by U.S. Attorney Edward R. Martin Jr., U.S. Attorney General Pamela Bondi, FBI Assistant Director in Charge Steven J. Jensen of the Washington Field Office, and FBI Assistant Director in Charge Christopher G. Raia of the New York Field Office.
This post was edited on 8/18/25 at 2:40 pm
Posted on 8/18/25 at 5:20 pm to GumboPot
quote:
Israel loves them some child molesters.
GUILTY!
At least of putting off creepy perv vibes.
Loading Twitter/X Embed...
If tweet fails to load, click here. Posted on 8/18/25 at 5:48 pm to winkchance
quote:
Under the principle of diplomatic immunity, the ability of the US to hold a foreign visiting official on a crime is limited. Here's a breakdown:
Thanks ??? ????? Google ??? Google AI!

Posted on 8/18/25 at 7:01 pm to SDVTiger
quote:
What the frick are you babbling about? What with the obsession with me
Buddy no one is more anti American than people like you who worship Israel. If this isn’t evidence that Israel runs our shite then I don’t know what is.
Posted on 8/18/25 at 7:10 pm to dgnx6
quote:
No need to be full of shite billjamin.
Is this guy in jail or back in Israel?
Posted on 8/18/25 at 7:31 pm to Toomer Deplorable
No one from that part of the world belongs in the US. They all need to go back. They are not like us, even the light skinned ones
Posted on 8/18/25 at 8:09 pm to GumboPot
quote:
Israel loves them some child molesters.
Muslims are even worst.
Posted on 8/18/25 at 9:04 pm to billjamin
quote:
Is this guy in jail or back in Israel?
From Las Vegas to the Negev: Israel Faces Scandals Over Pedophilia and Child Abuse…
…The arrest of Tom Artiom Alexandrovich, a senior Israeli government cyber official, in Las Vegas this month has unleashed shockwaves that stretch far beyond Nevada.
American police say Alexandrovich was booked and released on $10,000 bail before departing for Israel. Officials in Jerusalem, however, scrambled to manage the fallout. The Prime Minister’s Office initially issued statements denying an arrest had taken place, describing it instead as a “questioning.”
Israeli media outlets subsequently obtained court records that contradicted those denials, revealing he had in fact been charged before returning home. The contradiction illustrates a familiar pattern in Israeli political life: contain the scandal, deny first, and let the facts trickle out later.
Ex-IDF Alexandrovich, 38, was detained during a multi-agency undercover sting targeting online child predators. According to Nevada authorities, he attempted to solicit sex with a minor using the internet, a felony under state law carrying a potential sentence of one to ten years. He had traveled to the U.S. to attend the Black Hat cybersecurity conference, a major gathering for global intelligence and security professionals. Instead of returning with new expertise, he left with the taint of criminal charges hanging over him.
While Alexandrovich’s case is still pending, it has already become more than a personal scandal. It highlights a deeper and more troubling history of Israel’s entanglement with sexual abuse cases, particularly its reputation as a refuge for accused pedophiles from the United States.
The idea of Israel as a safe haven for alleged child molesters is not new. Since the mid-1980s, accused offenders from America have slipped across the ocean and built new lives in Israel, often shielded by the country’s Law of Return, which grants automatic citizenship to Jews worldwide. A 2020 CBS News investigation found that more than 60 Americans accused of child sexual abuse since 2014 alone had relocated to Israel. Activist organizations such as Jewish Community Watch believe the true figure is considerably higher.
The most notorious of these cases is that of Avrohom Mondrowitz, a Brooklyn psychologist who faced an indictment in 1985 for sodomizing boys in his care. Mondrowitz fled to Israel before he could be prosecuted. For years he was spotted in ultra-Orthodox neighborhoods, sometimes even near schools.
For decades, American prosecutors sought his extradition, but Israel’s courts repeatedly blocked the requests. It was only after reforms to Israeli extradition law in 1999 and amendments to the treaty in 2005 that the possibility of extraditing Israeli citizens became real. By then, Mondrowitz had lived freely for over two decades, and his victims in New York were left without closure.
These cases reflect not only loopholes in treaties but also social dynamics. Israel’s insular ultra-Orthodox communities have sometimes provided cover for abusers, shielding them from accountability. Victims face immense stigma in speaking out, both in Brooklyn and in Jerusalem. While Israeli officials stress that the country cooperates with extradition requests, critics note that cooperation is often painfully slow and that, in practice, fugitives can exploit the legal system to delay proceedings for years.
Whether through legal loopholes that allowed men like Mondrowitz to evade justice, political denials that obscure uncomfortable truths, or the systemic lack of accountability for prison guards accused of abuse, the result is the same: children left unprotected.
Together, these stories form a disturbing continuum. On one end, Israel has too often provided a refuge for American sex offenders, delaying or denying extradition. On the other, it faces credible allegations of systematic sexual violence against Palestinian minors in its custody. At the center lies the Alexandrovich case, a senior official whose arrest abroad embarrasses both Washington and Jerusalem. The common thread is impunity.
For Israel, a nation that prides itself on security and the protection of its people, these scandals cut to the heart of its legitimacy. For the United States, they raise uncomfortable questions about the costs of unconditional alliance.
The Alexandrovich scandal may yet fade from headlines, but it exposes fissures in Israel’s political and moral foundations. Unless addressed with transparency and accountability, those fissures will only deepen, leaving victims—American and Palestinian alike—abandoned to their trauma.
Posted on 8/18/25 at 10:37 pm to Toomer Deplorable
Why should American tax payers have to for the bill to jail him? Just send them home and let Israel deal with it.
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