The company strives to protect ownership while also prohibiting transactions in assets obtained in an offense against ownership, in order to achieve two main goals – on the one hand, to reduce the feasibility of these offenses as much as possible, while limiting the possibilities of transferring the assets to others, and on the other hand, to increase the chances of perhaps seizing those assets with the perpetrator of the original offense, and thus also to discover the offense and return the assets to their owners" (S.Z. Feller, Foundations of Penal Law (Vol. 1 – 1984) 734-735).
Similarly, 10 Front, In his book on criminal law (Part Two, New Edition - 2013) 978):
"The purpose of the offense is to prohibit the receipt of illegally acquired assets, and in this way to indirectly combat the receivers of the assets themselves; As stated, without a 'receiver' – there is no point in 'obtaining' the assets" (and also there, at p. 901, regarding the offense of receiving a stolen vehicle or part under section 413J of the Penal Law, which is "an offense sister to the general offense of receiving assets obtained by crime or misdemeanor").
Support for this approach that restricts use Section 411 For offenses against property, it can be found in a number of judgments (Criminal Appeal 207/71 State of Israel v. SkorkaIsrSC 25(2) 191, 192 (1971); Criminal Appeal 987/02 State of Israel v. ZubeidaIsrSC 58(4) 880, 890 (2004); Criminal Appeal 5298/02 Ohana v. State of Israel, paragraph 7 (April 9, 2003); Criminal case (Central District) 50614-07-12 State of Israel v. Mena, paragraph 8 (November 19, 2012)). On the other hand, sometimes a conviction for the offense of receiving assets obtained in a crime or misdemeanor was confirmed even when the original offense did not infringe on the right to property but rather other social values (Criminal Appeal 791/79 Binder v. State of IsraelIsrSC 34(3) 117 (1980); Criminal Appeal 384/80 State of Israel v. Ben-Baruch, IsrSC 35(1) 589 (1980) - customs smuggling; Kedmi, ibid., at pp. 977, 982, 988).