Guys that Beat Up Gay Blck Man Want to Change Sweet Plea Which Kept Them Free
I posted about this story back on 2013 [click hasidic-jews-arrested-on-beating-of gay black man ]
Its unbelievable that these cowards were never sent to jail but they signed a sweet-heart plea agreement to do 150 hrs of community service among an integrated neighborhood(not their own cubby neighborhood where they spent their off time or among their ‘religious’group). Guess what? They are screaming fowl now to the prosecutor and want to do their sentence(sentence??) where they choose which you guessed it! it will be among their own people.
The New York Post brought this to my attention with the following story(for pictures click on the above link):
Two Shomrim thugs who dodged jail after beating a gay black man into a pulp are now trying to shirk the conditions of their plea deal.
Pinchas Braver and Abraham Winkler — who admitted to jumping Taj Patterson as he walked down a Williamsburg block in Brooklyn in December 2013 — have now taken issue with the DA’s recommendation that they serve their 150 hours of community service in a “culturally diverse neighborhood.”
Taj Patterson was beaten by a group of Hasidic men in Williamsburg.
Instead, the men want to toil at Chai Lifeline, an organization for sick Jewish children.
While Braver, 22, and Winkler, 42, were in court Tuesday for sentencing, prosecutors opted to return to court Aug. 16 after a more thorough investigation into Chai, which describes itself as an organization dedicated to offering “a number of services for Jewish children with life-threatening illness.”
As part of the plea, the two men agreed to be sentenced on charges of unlawful imprisonment to three years’ probation and to pay $1,400 restitution for the vicious attack, which left Patterson permanently blind in one eye.
Though five defendants were originally charged in the beating, charges were dropped against two of them — Aharon Hollender and Joseph Fried — in 2014 and 2015. The remaining defendant, Mayer Heskovic, has opted to head to trial. He will return to court Aug. 23.
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