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Rabbi David Wax pleads guilty to kidnapping in agunah case

New Jersey Rabbi David Wax pleaded guilty to kidnapping charges as part of a scheme to force an Israeli to give his wife a get.
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May 7, 2014

New Jersey Rabbi David Wax pleaded guilty to kidnapping charges as part of a scheme to force an Israeli to give his wife a get.

The rabbi admitted to being paid $100,000 to compel the man — identified by the Associated Press as Yisrael Briskman — to grant his wife a religious writ of divorce, known as a get. The money came from Briskman’s wife.

Wax lured Briskman to his house on Oct. 17, 2010, had him beaten by a group of thugs and threatened to bury him alive in the Pocono Mountains unless he agreed to give the get, according to court papers cited by the N.Y. Daily News.

Under Orthodox law, women whose husbands refuse to grant them religious writs of divorce may not remarry; they are known as agunahs, or chained women.

A native of the haredi Orthodox township of Lakewood, Wax and eight others were arrested in July 2011 following an FBI investigation into thugs-for-hire who used violence to coerce recalcitrant husbands into grant religious divorces to their wives.

On Tuesday, Wax pleaded guilty to conspiring to commit kidnapping and faces life in prison and a $250,000 fine. He is to be sentenced Aug. 19.

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