15 nujabe 0 8/16/2025, 9:41:12 PM

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andy99 · 1h ago
Normally (at least in the US) intelligence personnel are heavily vetted for this sort of thing, as a pretty obviously vector for blackmail etc. I wonder if the role, apparently "executive director of the Israel Cyber Directorate" did not need a real security clearance, or if it just wasn't detected?

(Also unclear why he would have been released)

duxup · 1h ago
I'll guess that maybe this job is less so about qualifications and he knew the right people and they trusted him.
nujabe · 1h ago
Your question, while genuine, reveals the impacts of the decades long media propaganda that Israel and the West “share the same values”.

Have you considered, what if he did go through security clearance, and his proclivities for young children were known, but it just didn’t register in the Israeli richter scale of degeneracy?

After all Israel is the wakanda of pedos.

https://www.cbsnews.com/amp/news/how-jewish-american-pedophi...

duxup · 1h ago
Released and allowed to return to Israel. That's some horrific level of impunity.
bigyabai · 1h ago
> Tom Artiom Alexandrovich, 38, faces felony charges of luring a child with a computer for a sex act

> He has since evidently been released from custody and returned to Israel.

That is a terrifying level of criminal impunity. If I was an Israeli citizen, I wouldn't feel very safe knowing these sorts of people are protected by the government.

nujabe · 1h ago
yieldcrv · 1h ago
And it was Nevada police using Nevada law, which would exempt minors age 16, 17 and 18

So this guy was involved in the investigation with someone aged 15 or younger