http://www.israelhayom.com/
Sheinbein finally gets what he deserved
On Sunday, inmate Samuel Sheinbein, 34, was killed at the Rimonim prison near Tel Aviv, after shooting and seriously wounding three guards. The Israel Prison Service and police are now investigating the incident.
How Sheinbein obtained a weapon and managed to fire it without detection are among the questions being asked. Accusations are starting to fly, with Sheinbein’s lawyer claiming that she had alerted the IPS to her client’s “great stress,” but to no avail.
Meanwhile, the larger controversy surrounding Sheinbein’s incarceration is barely being mentioned, even by members of the media covering the shootings. Perhaps it is considered old news, the details of which are only worth repeating for background information.
But if there ever was a case that needed rehashing, it is this one.
In 1997, when Sheinbein was 17, he and Aaron Needle — a friend from the Charles E. Smith Jewish day school in Maryland — committed the premeditated murder of another teenager, Alfredo Tello, Jr., due to rivalry over a girl.
The murder was meticulously planned and carried out by Sheinbein and Needle, who lured their victim to a designated area, incapacitated him with a stun gun, choked him with a rope and stabbed him in the neck and chest with a knife. They then took his dead body to Sheinbein’s family garage, where they dismembered and burned it. Afterwards, they stuffed it into a garbage bag, placed it in the trunk of Needle’s car and deposited it in a vacant home for sale that belonged to a different classmate.