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Serious Crimes Case (Haifa) 9375-05-21 State of Israel v. David Abu Aziz - part 108

March 24, 2026
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After leaving the Chevrolet car for the use of Aviel Dadon, the defendant, according to his version, drove to Meron in the Toyota car used by Sigal Avioz, his ex-wife, and all the members of her household, and in fact disabled everyone from the ability to move independently in this vehicle, while at the same time he was in possession of two (!) vehicles (the Toyota car and the Chevrolet car).  The defendant had planned, so he claimed, to return the Toyota car to Sigal that evening, but behold, miraculously, the defendant met in Meron a man who was familiar to him in appearance as Nesher (but he does not know who he was), and how did he identify him as a resident of Nesher? Because that person called him "Dudi" and that's how everyone calls him in Nesher.  The man agreed to drive the Toyota to Siegel's home and leave it outside, while the key was placed on the rear wheel.  In other words, the defendant asked us to believe the version that he gave a car that was not his, Sigal Avioz's car, which is used by all the family members, to a person who does not know who he is, does not know if he is allowed to drive, does not know if he knows how to drive, and does not know if he will truly do as he wants, transfer the car to the house at 18 Gevburah Street in Nesher and not covet his friend's car.  He shall do with it as he has ripe, and they shall disappear forever.

This is not because the defendant sought to deceive us, and it is not possible to believe any part of the version in question.

However, all the wonders of the defendant's version did not end.

After saying goodbye to the Toyota car, the defendant accidentally met some person on his way back to Rashbi's grave, and instead of continuing to Rashbi's grave (for this purpose he chose to remain in Meron while handing over the Toyota car to an unknown person), the defendant went with that random person to his car, all he knew about was that his name was "Yitzhak" (p.  3904), and he stayed with that person throughout the night until 6 a.m.  While they are drunk and speaking words of Torah.  He spent a whole night, locked in a car, in the company of an unknown and unknown person, and the defendant was unable to tell about that person even a single detail that could be used to verify his strange, not to say delusional, version.  Moreover, the miraculous version was also sequeled, the defendant went to purchase a bourekas, noticed a man he knew by the name of Yair (Yair, nothing more), and suddenly, another miraculous act, a man who introduced himself as a friend of Aviel Dadon called him and asked to return the Chevrolet car to him.  Thus emerged in retrospect the reason why the defendant should have told Aviel Dadon even earlier about giving the phone number to Aviel Dadon, otherwise how that unknown friend could have contacted him while he was in Meron.

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