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Alleged Israel mob boss Yitzhak Abergil pleads guilty in LA

[additional-authors]
May 8, 2012

Reputed Israeli crime boss Itzhak Abergil pleaded guilty Monday in a Los Angeles federal court to participating in a large-scale Ecstasy distribution ring, whose members killed an accomplice in Sherman Oaks nine years ago.

His attorney, Mark Werksman, told the Associated Press that as part of the plea agreement, Abergil, 43, will serve a 10-year prison term. Sentencing is set for May 21.

Abergil, his brother Meir, and three associates were extradited by Israeli authorities to Los Angeles 16 months ago.

They have been held in a federal prison facility since, with the exception of Meir Abergil, who was freed last August and returned to Israel, after serving three years in Israeli and American prisons.

In a 77-page, 32-count indictment, and in subsequent statements, U.S. prosecutors charged that the Abergil brothers and their associates ran one of the largest rings importing narcotics into the United States, working with two other drug syndicates, the Jerusalem Network and another in the San Fernando Valley.

Yitzhak Abergil was also charged with racketeering conspiracy in the murder of Sami Atias. In his guilty plea, Abergil said that Atias was killed for stealing a large drug shipment from the gang.

The indictment listed the underworld monikers of the alleged mobsters, with Yitzhak Abergil also known as The Friend, The Big Friend, and the Man from the South.

The three indicted associates are Sasson Barashy, Moshe Malul, and Israel Ozifa (aka Israel the Tall or The Tall One).

Two other defendants, Yoram El-Al (aka The Wounded) and Luis Sandoval (aka Barney Twin or Hog), are fugitives and sought by police.

Israeli courts have rarely agreed to extradite their nationals to other countries, and in this case Israeli and U.S. officials agreed that if the defendants were found guilty, they would not receive the death penalty and would serve any sentences in Israeli prisons.

The Los Angeles Police Department has been concerned with Israeli crime in the city since the 1970s. “Israeli crime here tends to be quite sophisticated and hard to track,” said Captain Greg Hall, commander of the department’s Major Crimes Division in an earlier Journal interview.

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