Rami Saban and another man convicted for trafficking. The courts have forbidden publication of Digmi's picture. Photo by Nir Kafri and Nimrod Glickman
At Haaretz'
request, court exposes identity of Dudi Digmi, police informer who was nation's
No. 1 pimp.
ED Noor: White slavery, black slavery ~ cattle ~ chattel ~ There is
definitely a pattern here you must agree. I looked extensively on the net for a photo of this
Dudi Digmi and found only a few images of … well I do not read Hebrew but I
would advise the few who have this name and are innocent to change it. Play
particular attention to the comments of Mark Glenn below on the matter of Abram
and Sarai. Ask yourself just what diseases Sarai spread among the harem and the
people of Egypt. We know any woman normally given or traded to Pharoah for his
harem would have been extensively checked for cleanliness, health and in most
cases virginity. What disease was so serious that events unfolded as they did?
I will enclose at the end of this article a list of work done
previously on the topic of White slavery in Israel today. This time there is
even a name to attribute behind some of these sordid events. The behavior of this man is not original in
Jewish history. Please read my article on Zwi Midgal for the details of a crime
that has changed little in its methodology over the centuries.
ED Mark Glenn: Lest we
forget, the precedent for Jewish trafficking in women (as well as the first
recorded act of ‘anti-semitism’) began with the biblical tale of Abraham, found
in the very first book of the Jewish Torah, Genesis 12, 10-20
‘Now there was a famine in the land, and Abram went down to Egypt to live there for a while because the famine was severe. As he was about to enter Egypt, he said to his wife Sarai, “I know what a beautiful woman you are. When the Egyptians see you, they will say, ‘This is his wife.’ Then they will kill me but will let you live. Say you are my sister, so that I will be treated well for your sake and my life will be well treated on your account.”
.When Abram came to Egypt, the Egyptians saw that Sarai was a very beautiful woman. And when Pharaoh’s officials saw her, they praised her to Pharaoh, and she was taken into his palace. He treated Abram well for her sake, and Abram acquired sheep and cattle, male and female donkeys, male and female servants, and camels..
But the Lord inflicted serious diseases on Pharaoh and his household because of Abram’s wife Sarai. So Pharaoh summoned Abram. “Why have you dealt with me so treacherously? He said. “Why didn’t you tell me she was your wife? Why did you say, ‘She is my sister,’ so that I took her to be my wife? Now then, here is your wife. Take her and go!” Then Pharaoh gave orders about Abram to his men, and they sent him on his way, with his wife and everything he had.
After over a year of legal
battles, a Tel Aviv District Court judge on Monday allowed Haaretz to publish
the name of David (Dudi)
Digmi, the biggest trafficker in women in Israeli history.
Judge Chaled Kabub described
Digmi as the central figure in the largest network in Israel trafficking in
women, with operations and connections overseas in the former Soviet Union,
Britain, Cyprus and Belgium. Four of the network’s senior members were
sentenced to three to 18 years in prison, and another member is serving 18
years in a Russian jail.
Despite Digmi being the senior
figure in the network, the court put a gag order on publishing his name after
he agreed to become a state’s witness and police informer. The agreement was
unusual ~ 24 serious cases against Digmi were closed as part of the deal,
including such alleged crimes as attempted rape, trafficking in women, pimping,
extortion, drug possession and many more offenses committed over the course of
more than a decade.
In return for closing the cases,
Digmi agreed “not to commit any crime from the time of the signing [of the
agreement] until the end of his trial, and not to commit any offense that would
damage his credibility.”
ED Noor: “CREDIBILITY!?”
But Digmi did not keep his
promise. Even after signing the agreement with the state he continued to get in
trouble. Already during the trial of his former confederates in trafficking, he
joined forces with the head of a crime organization and committed extortion,
according to court documents. While acting as a state’s witness and testifying,
he was caught with drugs in his car and brass knuckles, and also was part-owner
of a club in which a woman was arrested for soliciting sex.
However, a number of complaints
to the police accusing Digmi of extortion and using threats of violence during
the period after he signed the agreement were closed by the police.
Furthermore, the Tel Aviv
district of the State Prosecutor’s Office, which dealt with the trafficking in
women cases together with police, continued to support Digmi’s requests to the
court to keep his involvement with law enforcement secret. The prosecution
claimed there was a danger to his life if his identity was exposed, which was
more important than the public’s right to know.
Kabub accepted Haaretz’s
arguments that there was a clear public interest in revealing Digmi’s identity.
“Digmi is the central and dominant criminal in the affair and has a heavy
criminal record. He received significant benefits in the closing of dozens of
open investigations against him, among other things,” the judge said. In his
decision, Kabub also said Digmi allegedly continued his criminal activities
with others despite the agreement he signed to become an informer and state’s
witness.
The trafficking case was exposed
in 2009, and when Kabub convicted the defendants early last year, he described
the affair as “one of the widest and most complex cases of trafficking in women
heard in the courts in recent years, if not the largest.”
The network smuggled hundreds of
young women from small villages and towns in Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Moldavia
and Uzbekistan after convincing them to come to Israel. They were told they
would find work in Israel as waitresses or dancers in clubs. In some of the
cases the traffickers, including Digmi, used severe violence against the women.
The women were smuggled into Israel through the Egyptian border or flown in
through Turkey.
Digmi told police how the network
worked: “Rami Saban [who was convicted in the case] and another man rented an
apartment on Yeshayahu Street in Tel Aviv. They would bring the women there
straight from Egypt. They would call me after a few hours or a day or two and
ask me to come to the apartment to choose the girls I wanted to buy. I came to
the apartment. There were 10 to 15 girls who came from Russia via Egypt. I
would look at the girls and examine them. How they looked, look at their chest,
at their body. … Those who were with me at the time of the examinations
translated what I said for the girls since they knew [only] Russian. They
translated [his instructions] to strip and turn around while I would check
them,” Digmi told police.
SOME PREVIOUS WORKSON WHITE SEX SLAVERY
(not to be confused with Jewish involvement with regular run-of-the-mill slavery for both black and white races). Although the emphasis is on females, it is more than possible that young males are also sold for such uses.
(not to be confused with Jewish involvement with regular run-of-the-mill slavery for both black and white races). Although the emphasis is on females, it is more than possible that young males are also sold for such uses.
Happily for Dudi and his personal guarantees to the israeli court, there's the ol' Kol Nidre prayer...
ReplyDeleteStrange looking for pics of Dudi in that there are sooo very many women's pics included. I'm still not sure which pic I looked at was him.
At the end of the day, I'd bet that Dudi wasn't/isn't on top of this slavery pyramid... he's simply a middleman, despite how the israeli court claims he's the bigboy in charge of all.
Heck, I had not even considered the "value" of the Kol Nidre here! You are absolutely correct... damn I wish the Christian Zionists could understand this criminal rite. But they all believe it to be a beautiful song........ love to God and all that jazz.
ReplyDelete