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Rabbi to celebrities loses appeal to void prison term in Israel

Israel’s Supreme Court upheld a one-year prison sentence for Yoshiyahu Pinto, an Israeli rabbi who has counseled such celebrities as LeBron James.
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January 7, 2016

Israel’s Supreme Court upheld a one-year prison sentence for Yoshiyahu Pinto, an Israeli rabbi who has counseled such celebrities as LeBron James.

Pinto had appealed the sentence, part of a plea bargain in which he pleaded guilty to bribing a senior police official. The Supreme Court announced its decision on Tuesday.

In the plea deal, finalized last April, the rabbi pleaded guilty to charges of bribery, attempted bribery and obstruction of justice in his effort to acquire information in another investigation about him. Pinto, the head of several charity organizations and yeshivas in Ashdod, in southern Israel, and in the United States, agreed to provide evidence that he bribed the officer.

His attorneys had asked the Supreme Court to cancel the prison sentence due to the important evidence he provided to the state. Pinto also is reported to be in ill health.

A day before the ruling, a New York State Supreme Court judge dismissed a $30 million lawsuit filed by a charity run by Pinto claiming that an Israeli journalist’s report on the charity, Mosdot Shuva Israel, and Pinto’s top U.S. official, Ben Zion Suky, made false and damaging statements about them. The judge found that a New York court would not have jurisdiction over the case.

Prominent Israelis, politicians, businessmen and sports figures have sought counsel from Pinto on business and personal matters. Along with James, an NBA superstar, they include former Rep. Anthony Weiner, businessman Jay Schottenstein and Israeli soccer star Guy Levy.

Pinto, a kabbalist, is the great-grandson of the well-known Morocco-born mystic known as the Baba Sali.

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