No charges in jail death of Australian Mossad spy

No charges in jail death of Australian Mossad spy
Updated 26 April 2013
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No charges in jail death of Australian Mossad spy

No charges in jail death of Australian Mossad spy

JERUSALEM: Israel will not press charges over the prison suicide of a disgraced Mossad spy from Australia, despite a series of missteps by jail officials on the day of his death in 2010, the Justice Ministry said yesterday.
Ben Zygier, 34, received “distressing news” from his wife just hours before hanging himself, but the jailer responsible for watching surveillance video from the isolation cell was away from the screen and missed the moments leading up to his death.
The case was kept secret until February, when an Australian television expose uncovered it, sparking frenzied media debate about Zygier’s intelligence role and the nature of his alleged crime.
A report into his death published yesterday suggested that the prison service had not complied with special instructions on supervising Zygier, who was not considered a top suicide risk despite admitting previous urges to kill himself.
However, the Attorney General said “the evidence is not sufficient in proving ... that the Prison Authority, or anyone else, negligently caused the deceased’s death”.
Without explicitly naming Zygier, Israel confirmed in 2010 that it had a dual nationality citizen in custody to prevent serious harm to national interests. The charges against him still remain top secret and under a gag order.
Australia’s Fairfax newspapers and German Der Spiegel said last month that Zygier was a spy for the Mossad intelligence agency and had unwittingly given away secret information about Lebanese informants, who were later arrested and jailed in Lebanon.
According to yesterday’s report, Zygier was held in isolation in a cell that was under 24-hour video surveillance. He had regular sessions with social workers and psychiatrists, and was allowed family visits at the jail in Ayalon, central Israel.
On the day of his death, the report said Zygier had seen his pregnant wife and daughter, and received undisclosed news that left him “crying, agitated and upset”.