Man who killed his rapist denied early release
Parole board fully accepts state prosecution’s arguments, says Yonatan Heilo can file another request in six months
A man who is in prison for killing his rapist will not be granted early release, the Israel Prisons Service parole board ruled on Wednesday, fully accepting the state prosecution’s arguments and stance.
Yonatan Heilo, who has long fought for early release and faced the parole board earlier this month, was sentenced in 2013 to 20 years in prison.
He became eligible for early release after the Supreme Court cut eight years from his original sentence in 2016, and President Reuven Rivlin commuted part of his remaining sentence in November 2017.
The 25-year-old can request early release again in six months, the parole board said on Wednesday, recommending that in the meantime Heilo join group therapy dealing with violence.
His lawyers said they would appeal the decision, adding that Heilo was “very disappointed.”
Heilo was initially convicted of murdering Yaron Eilin in the coastal city of Netanya, after the latter repeatedly raped, robbed and blackmailed him over a period of several months in 2010.
Eilin, a convicted felon, reportedly made comments to Heilo during a 2010 Lag B’Omer celebration suggesting that he intended to rape him again. Later that evening, when Eilin went to urinate in an alley and had his back turned, Heilo jumped him from behind, strangled him and beat his body with a rock.
In the original December 2013 verdict, the Lod District Court recognized Heilo as a rape victim, but rejected his claim of self-defense on the grounds that he hadn’t reported the previous assaults to police and that several weeks had elapsed between the last assault and Eilin’s murder.
But in its response to Heilo’s appeal, the Supreme Court recognized the “ongoing taunting” that he suffered “over a long period of abuse by the deceased toward the appellant, which included a web of violent incidents, threats of violence, including threats to the appellant’s life, financial extortion and sexual abuse, which included two acts of sodomy.”
The Supreme Court softened Heilo’s murder conviction, instead finding him guilty of manslaughter and reducing his term from 20 years to 12.
Rivlin then commuted part of the sentence to probation, bringing his jail time down to 10 years and eight months and enabling him to seek parole as he had by then served over half of his reduced sentence.
In 2016, at the recommendation of the Justice Ministry, Rivlin turned down Heilo’s request for a full pardon but said he would reconsider if a further request was submitted after a substantial period of time.
That request for a presidential pardon, submitted by Knesset member Yoel Hasson (Zionist Union), was signed by more than 70 MKs.