Thursday, October 08, 2009

Case of Rabbi Stanley Z. Levitt

Case of Rabbi Stanley Z. Levitt 
(AKA: Zulsa Levitt, Stanley Levitt, Samuel Levitt, Stan Levitt)
Rabbi Stanley Z. Levitt - Convicted Sex Offender

Hebrew Day School - Eastern, CT (1968-1970)

Beth Jacob - Philadelphia, PA (1979-1972)

Malmonides Day School - Brooklyn, MA (1974-1977)

Philadelpha, PA (1977 - Present)

Baltimore, MD (2009 - Present)

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August 1, 2012 -- Rabbi Stanley Levitt plead guilty to sexually assaulting several boys back in the 1970s in the Boston area.

Levitt on Maryland's Sex Offender Registry
According to the Pennsylvania Judicial System over the last ten years there have been several charges filed against Levitt including Indecent Assault, Endangering the Welfare of Children, Corrupting Minor, Indecent Exposure and Unlawful Restraint.  As of today Stanley Z. Levitt has never been found guilty of sex crime in which he would be placed on the sex offender registry.

There is a new trend that is happening all over the country (U.S.) Many alleged offender are pleading guilty to a lessor charge, so that the plea agreement will include a stipulation that a convicted sex offenders will not have to be placed on the states sex offenders registry. When this happens it puts the entire community (or in this case children in other countries) at risk of harm.

Levitt was born on April 4, 1947.  He received his rabbinical ordained by the Rabbinical College of America in Morristown, NY.

Back on Feb. 4, 2009, The Awareness Center out the first notice regarding Stanley Levitt residing in both Philadelphia, PA and Baltimore, MD.  Our organization also notified members of the Baltimore Vaad of the dangers and requested that they notified community members of the danger regarding this alleged serial rapist.

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Table of Contents:

2002 - 2004
  1. Court Summary - First Judicial District of Pennsylvania 

2009
  1. WARNING TO PARENTS In Philadelphia PA and Baltimore, MD   (02/04/2009)
    Rabbi Indicted On Child Sex Charges - Charges Date Back To 1970s  (09/24/2009)
  2. Former Maimonides rabbi charged with sexual assault   (10/02/2009) 
  3. Levitt charged with sexual assault  (10/07/2009)
  4. Ex-Mass. rabbi's sex abuse case heads to court (10/07/2009)
  5. Rabbi's Sex Abuse Case Heads to Court (10/07/2009) 
  6. Local Rabbi Faces Abuse Charges in Boston Court (10/08/2009)

2010
  1. The trial of alleged serial sexual predator - Rabbi Stanely Z. Levitt has been postponed until July, 2010 (04/14/2010)
  2. Ex-teacher to face new sex abuse charge  (06/28/2010)
  3. Former Brookline Rabbi Faces Additional Sexual Assault Charges (06/29/2010)
  4. Rabbi Accused Of Assaulting Another Boy (06/30/2010)
  5. Former Maimonides Teacher Pleads Not Guilty to Latest Sexual Assault Charges (06/30/2010)
  6. New Abuse Allegations Against Rabbi  (07/01/2010)
  7. Ex-Mass. rabbi arraigned again in child abuse (07/01/2010)
  8. Sex-abuse case against rabbi raises larger issues (07/20/2010)


2011
  1. Former Brookline Rabbi Pleads Not Guilty to Sexual Assault Charges (12/14/2011)
  2. CBS NEWS: Former Brookline Rabbi Decides Not To Plead Guilty To Molesting Children (12/14/2011)  
  3. Brookline rabbi pleads not guilty on molestation charges  (12/14/2011) 
  4. Rabbi Stanley Z. Levitt balks at plea deal in sex abuse case  (12/14/2011) 
  5. Accused rabbi backs off plea deal   (12/14/2011)

2012 
  1. Baltimore Rabbi warns community about alleged sex offender: Rabbi Stanley Levitt (07/15/2012)
  2. Rabbi admits to charges of abusing students at Brookline school during 1970s, authorities say (08/01/2012)
  3. Rabbi pleads guilty to sexually assaulting boys  (08/01/2012)
  4. Rabbi admits to sex abuse of students in 1970s   (08/01/2012)
  5. Brookline rabbi pleads guilty to child sexual abuse   (08/01/2012)
  6. Convicted sex offender Rabbi Stanley Z. Levitt and the Vaad of Baltimore  (08/01/2012)
  7. Boston area rabbi, Stanley Levitt, admits sexually abusing 3 students (08/01/2012)  
  8. Victim savors conviction of pedophile rabbi (08/01/2012)
  9. Rabbi admits molesting schoolboys (08/02/2012) 
  10. No jail time for Rabbi Stanley Levitt (08/02/2012)
  11. Rabbi awaits child molestation sentence  (08/02/2012) 
  12. Rabbi given probation, not jail in sex assault case  (08/02/2012)
  13. Can we trust the rabbonim of Baltimore to really monitor Rabbi Stanley Levitt?
 (08/03/2012)
  14. Thank you Rabbi Hopfer for warning the community! 
  15. Maryland Sex Offender Registry (08/16/2012) 

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Case of Rabbi Stanley Z. Levitt - Court Summary 2002 - 2004

Case of Rabbi Stanley Z. Levitt - Court Summary 2002 - 2004

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Case of Rabbi Stanley Levitt - Court Summary 2003


Case of Rabbi Stanley Levitt - Court Summary 2003

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Case of Rabbi Stanley Levitt - Court Summary
Case of Rabbi Stanley Levitt - Court Summary

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The Awareness Center

Letter to the community

 

WARNING TO PARENTS In Philadelphia, PA and Baltimore, MD


Case of Rabbi Stanely Z. Levitt
(AKA: Stanley Levitt, Stan Levitt)
Philadelphia, PA; Boston, MA; Baltimore, MD

Rabbi Stanely Z. Levitt has been accused of child molestation.  It is known that Rabbi Levitt has residence in both Philadelphia and Baltimore.  There are several adults who have accused Rabbi Stanley Levitt of child molestation over the last twenty-five years. According to the Pennsylvania Judicial System over the last ten years there have been several charges filed against Levitt including Indecent Assault, Endangering the Welfare of Children, Corrupting Minor, Indecent Exposure and Unlawful Restraint. As of today he has never been found guilty of sex crime in which he would be placed on the sex offender registry.

More information will be posted about Rabbi Levitt over the next few days on The Awareness Center's web page. 


There is a new trend that is happening all over the country (U.S.) Many alleged offender are pleading guilty to a lessor charge, so that the plea agreement will include a stipulation that a convicted sex offenders will not have to be placed on the states sex offenders registry. When this happens it puts the entire community (or in this case children in other countries) at risk of harm.

If you were abused by Rabbi Stanley Levitt please contact The Awareness Center:

443-(NUMBER REMOVED)
info@(ADDRESS REMOVED)
We are also looking for photographs of him to put up on our web page


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Rabbi Indicted On Child Sex Charges
Charges Date Back To 1970s

The Boston - September 24, 2009
Rabbi Stanley Levitt
A former Massachusetts rabbi has been indicted on child sexual assault charges dating back to the 1970s, when he allegedly assaulted two of his pre-teen male students, Suffolk County District Attorney Daniel F. Conley said Thursday.

A Suffolk County grand jury returned indictments charging Stanley Z. Levitt, 63, of Philadelphia, with four counts of indecent assault and battery on a person under 14 for allegedly assaulting two former students of the Maimonides School in Brookline, where Levitt was a teacher.

"This was a betrayal of trust in the most awful sense," Conley said. "The evidence suggests that Levitt abused a position of power, respect, and authority to engage in sexual behavior with boys who were too young to resist and too afraid to speak out."

Levitt is charged with offenses against two former students, both about 11 years old at the time of the crimes, Conley said.

One charge stems from a May 1975 incident in which Levitt allegedly visited a Maimonides student who was recuperating at Children's Hospital in Boston after an accident.

The other three offenses were allegedly committed against a different male student during a three-night visit to Levitt's Chiswick Road home, also believed to have taken place in 1975.
"It was the tolling provision in the statute of limitations that allowed us to bring these charges," Conley said. "When Levitt left Massachusetts for Pennsylvania in 1980, the clock stopped and left him open to these charges."

Conley's office learned of the allegations when the Children's Hospital victim notified Boston police in September of last year.

Levitt is expected to face arraignment in Suffolk Superior Court on Oct. 17.


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Former Maimonides rabbi charged with sexual assault 
By Staff reports

Stanley Z. Levitt of Philadelphia was charged with four counts of indecent assault and battery on a person under 14 for allegedly assaulting two former students at Maimonides, where Levitt was a teacher. Both students were about 11 years old at the time of the alleged crimes.

According to Conley, Levitt is expected to be arraigned in Superior Court next Wednesday on the series of abuse charges believed to have occurred at his Brighton home and a Boston hospital.

“This was a betrayal of trust in the most awful sense,” Conley said. “The evidence suggests that Levitt abused a position of power, respect and authority to engage in sexual behavior with boys were too young to resist and too afraid to speak out.”

In a May 1975 incident, Levitt allegedly visited a student at Children’s Hospital Boston after the boy was involved in an accident.

Three other offenses were allegedly committed against a different boy during a three-night visit to the rabbi’s Chiswick Road home in 1975. Conley’s office learned of the allegations when the Children’s Hospital victim reported the abuse to Boston Police in September 2008.

The District Attorney’s office said Levitt is represented by attorney Scott Curtis. He is expected to face arraignment in Suffolk Superior Court on Oct. 17. Curtis said he has not been retained yet, pending the arraignment, and that he has no comment, “except he’s innocent.”

In 2006, the statute of limitations on child sexual abuse was extended from 15 years to 27 years, but it was a different piece of the law that allowed prosecutors to pursue charges against Levitt 34 years after the alleged crimes.

“It was the tolling provision in the statute of limitations that allowed us to bring these charges,” Conley said. “When Levitt left Massachusetts for Pennsylvania in 1980, the clock stopped and left him open to these charges.

Erin Clossey contributed to this report.


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Levitt charged with sexual assault
By Staff reports
Wicked Local - October 7, 2009



Stanley Z. Levitt, 63, of Philadelphia was released on $5,000 surety following his arraignment on four counts of indecent assault and battery on a child in Suffolk Superior Court. Each of those counts carries a potential 10-year state prison sentence.
Suffolk Superior Court Clerk Magistrate Robin Vaughan further ordered that Levitt have no unsupervised contact with children while his case is pending.

Assistant District Attorney Wayne Margolis of the Suffolk County District Attorney’s Child Protection Unit said Levitt had been a teacher at the Maimonides School in Brookline between 1974 and 1977. Both of the victims were 11-year-old students at the school during that time.

In one incident, Margolis said, a student had been hospitalized after injuring his hand in an accident and was recuperating at Children’s Hospital in Boston. Levitt went to visit him in his hospital room and sexually assaulted him.

The second victim was assaulted three times during the course of a weekend visit to Levitt’s former residence on Chiswick Road in Brighton while the boy’s parents were out of town. Levitt allegedly assaulted the boy three times during that visit.

“There are numerous witnesses to corroborate the victims’ accounts,” Margolis said in court, adding that “a third victim has come forward in recent days” after learning of Levitt’s Sept. 23 indictment through the media.

Levitt has convictions for indecent assault on a child and corrupting a minor in Philadelphia, where he moved after leaving Maimonides. Levitt remains on probation for the Philadelphia offenses until December of this year.

Levitt’s trail date is scheduled for July 12, 2010, and he will return to court on Dec. 10.


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Ex-Mass. rabbi's sex abuse case heads to court
The Associated Press - October 7, 2009


BOSTON - A rabbi who once taught at a Boston-area school faces arraignment on child sex abuse charges dating to the mid-1970s.

Stanley Levitt of Philadelphia is scheduled to appear in Suffolk Superior Court on Wednesday to face four counts of indecent assault and battery on a child.

Prosecutors allege Levitt, now 63, assaulted two former students, both about 11 years old, who attended the Maimonides School in Brookline in 1975.

One alleged victim who says he was molested while recuperating at Children's Hospital went to police last September.

Suffolk District Attorney Daniel Conley brought the charges because the clock stops on the statute of limitations when a suspect leaves the state.

Levitt's lawyer, Scott Curtis, did not immediately return calls seeking comment.

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The trial of alleged serial sexual predator - Rabbi Stanely Z. Levitt has been postponed until July, 2010.  

The Awareness Center Daily Newsletter - April 14, 2010


Back in 2006 The Awareness Center first heard the allegations made against Rabbi Stanley Levitt of molestation.  Since then two other adult survivors have come forward.  

According to the Pennsylvania Judicial System over the last ten years there have been several charges filed against Levitt including Indecent Assault, Endangering the Welfare of Children, Corrupting Minor, Indecent Exposure and Unlawful Restraint.  As of today Stanley Z. Levitt has never been found guilty of sex crime in which he would be placed on the sex offender registry.

Allegedly Rabbi Levitt has been molesting boys for over forty years.  According to reliable source,  Levitt was banned from working with children and forced into therapy.


There is a new trend that is happening all over the country (U.S.) Many alleged offender are pleading guilty to a lessor charge, so that the plea agreement will include a stipulation that a convicted sex offenders will not have to be placed on the states sex offenders registry. When this happens it puts the entire community (or in this case children in other countries) at risk of harm.


Levitt was born on April 4, 1947.  He received his rabbinical ordained by the Rabbinical College of America in Morristown, NY.  He resides in both Philadelphia and Baltimore, MD.  The Awareness Center has been informed that when Levitt is in town, he daven's (prays) at Rabbi Yaakov Hopfer's synagogue (The Glenn Avenue shul)



If you were abused by Rabbi Stanley Levitt please contact The Awareness Center


Due to software issues The Awareness Center is unable to update our site on Levitt.  Missing from the page is the following article.

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Rabbi's Sex Abuse Case Heads to Court

By Laura Crimaldi Boston Herald - October 7, 2009

A former Bay State rabbi is scheduled to be arraigned this morning on charges he sexually assaulted two 11-year-old students while he taught at the Maimonides School in Brookline during the 1970s.
Stanley Z. Levitt, 63, of Philadelphia, was indicted last month by a Suffolk County grand jury on four counts of indecent assault and battery on a person under 14, prosecutors said. He will be arraigned during the magistrate session at Suffolk Superior Court.

In one instance, Levitt allegedly sexually assaulted an 11-year-old male student in his hospital room while the boy was recuperating at Children's Hospital in Boston after an accident, according to Suffolk County District Attorney Daniel F. Conley.

A different 11-year-old boy was allegedly assaulted in three other attacks during a three-night visit to Levitt's Chiswick Road home. All the alleged offenses occurred in 1975, Conley said.

Conley's office learned of the allegations when the Children's Hospital victim notified Boston police in September of last year.

In 2006, the statute of limitations on child sexual abuse was extended from 15 years to 27 years. Prosecutors, however, were able to bring charges against Levitt because the clock on the statute of limitations against him stopped when he left Massachusetts for Pennsylvania in 1980, Conley said.

Levitt has faced similar charges in Pennsylvania. Records from the First District Court of Pennsylvania show he was charged with indecent assault, corrupting a minor, endangering the welfare of children and indecent exposure in 2001.

He pleaded no contest to the charges of indecent assault and corrupting a minor, records show. The charges of indecent exposure and endangering the welfare of children were dropped.

 

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Local Rabbi Faces Abuse Charges in Boston Court
Jewish Exponent - October 08, 2009
By Bryan Schwartzman, Staff Writer
A rabbi living in Northeast Philadelphia has been charged in Boston for allegedly sexually abusing two students at a day school there more than 30 years ago.

He was released on $5,000 bail following his arraignment on Oct. 7 on four counts of indecent assault and battery on a child. His trial is scheduled to begin July 12, 2010.

In the past decade, Rabbi Stanley Z. Levitt, 63, has faced similar charges here in Philadelphia.

Local court records show that in three separate cases, from August 2001 to May 2003, Levitt -- who also goes by the first name Zusia -- was arrested on various charges related to claims of indecent assault against three boys from the Rhawnhurst section in the Northeast.

In one case, Levitt entered a plea of no contest to indecent assault and corrupting a minor -- both classified as misdemeanors. He was sentenced in 2004 in the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas to five years probation, which will be up in December.

Another case went to trial and resulted in a not guilty verdict. Charges were withdrawn in the third case, court documents show.

According to court records, a number of the alleged incidents took place from 1999 to 2002 inside Congregation Lubavitch, Lubavitcher Center, at 7622 Castor Ave., where Levitt attended services for a time.

A number of sources within the Orthodox community declined to speak on the record. But several said that Levitt -- who apparently hasn't worked as a rabbi or teacher in the local community for years -- was essentially shunned following the accusations.

For his part, Levitt said that he is "totally innocent.

"The entire thing is horrendous; it's a nightmare," Levitt declared earlier this week, before he appeared in court in Boston. At the Boston arraignment, Levitt pleaded not guilty to all charges.

Scott Curtis, the attorney representing Levitt in Massachusetts, said, "We are going to fight these all the way. He said he would raise questions about competency and motives in the case.

Jonathan James, an attorney who represented Levitt in Philadelphia, could not be reached.

Rabbi Abraham Shemtov -- who has overseen Lubavitch efforts in the region for decades and who chairs the movement's umbrella body -- said that Levitt used to attend his synagogue, but that he no longer does.

Shemtov said that there were "lots of rumor that flew back and forth" about Levitt over the years, but he never got involved, and the rumors have stopped.

"No one came to me either seeking a solution or asking for help," said Shemtov.

With these kind of rumors, "unless you can be of help or assistance, you don't get involved," he added.
The father of the boy whose accusations resulted in the no contest plea here said that Levitt had been a trusted friend and neighbor.

At the time, that boy and the other two boys involved in the Philadelphia cases were students enrolled at Politz Hebrew Academy in Northeast Philadelphia.

"The children called him 'uncle,' " said the father, who asked not be to identified to protect the privacy of his son, who is now in his early 20s and living in New York.

The father said that he was incensed that Levitt "seems to be walking around the Northeast as if nothing had ever happened. It's very hard to restrain myself."

The charges in Boston date back to 1975, when Levitt taught sixth grade at the Maimonides School, an Orthodox day school in Brookline, Mass.

He has been accused by two former students who were 11 years old at the time, and are now in their 40s.

Assistant District Attorney Wayne Margolis of Suffolk County. Mass., said in court that "a third victim has come forward in recent days" after hearing about the case in the media.

Usually, a statute of limitations makes it difficult for adults who were victims of abuse to come forward later in life and press charges.

However, according to Suffolk County District Attorney Daniel Conley, the Massachusetts statute was rendered null and void when Levitt moved to Pennsylvania in 1980.

"The clock stopped and left him open to these charges," Conley said in a news release.

The current indictment states that one 1975 incident allegedly took place when Levitt visited a student, Michael Brecher, at Children's Hospital in Boston after the boy had an accident -- he got his finger slammed in a door and wound up having part of it reattached -- in the classroom.

The now 46-year-old unemployed actor said in a telephone interview from Baltimore, where he now resides, that he has suffered from depression most of his adult life, although it wasn't until five or six years ago that he linked many of his emotional problems to the abuse he allegedly suffered as a boy.
He said that he contacted the Boston police about the incidents a year ago.

"It affects a person at the most intimate level of relationships, and the damages are just incredible," said Brecher.

"I don't know what God wants of me, I don't know what I'm supposed to do in this lifetime," but pursuing this case is one "obvious thing," he said.

After the indictment was handed down, Jeffrey Swarz, who chairs Maimonides' board of directors, sent a letter to parents.

"For me, the news of these allegations from the past is an unwelcome but timely means to redouble the sacred work of providing a safe, secure, Torah-centered educational experience for our children," wrote Swarz.

Over the last decade or so, a number of high-profile cases involving sexual abuse in several Orthodox communities in other cities have come to light.

Some claim that Orthodox religious leadership has, on more than on occasion, decided to handle allegations internally, rather than involve outside secular authorities.

"They don't have education [in the field], don't have training, and they end up blaming the victim," said Vicki Polin.

Polin, a Baltimore resident, founded the Awareness Center: The International Jewish Coalition Against Sexual Abuse/Assault. She said that she has followed the Levitt case and has also advised Brecher.

"The time has come to break the taboo and allow all Jewish communities to face reality," said Polin.

The father of the boy in the Philadelphia case said that several members of his community had implored him not to go to the authorities. He declined to name them.

It's difficult to paint a full and accurate picture of Levitt's life, but it appears that for a time he moved from city to city. Currently, he has a Philadelphia address.

Sources said that Levitt grew up in the area and attended the Talmudical Yeshiva of Philadelphia.
According to a Maimonides yearbook from the mid-70s, he earned his ordination at the Rabbinical College of New Jersey, which later became the Rabbinical College of America, which is affiliated with the Lubavitch movement.

The same yearbook notes that from 1968-70, he taught at the Hebrew Day School of Eastern Connecticut in New Haven before moving to the now-defunct Beth Jacob School in Elkins Park, where he worked from 1970-72.

From 1972 to 1974, he was employed at the Hebrew Academy of Atlantic City, N.J., before moving on to Maimonides in Massachusetts, where they noted that he stayed until 1977.

Philadelphia court records from the early 2000s show that Levitt was then unemployed and living on a pension.

In the past few years, Levitt had been attending services at Young Israel of Oxford Circle in Northeast Philadelphia, which closed earlier this year, according to the synagogue's president, Stanley Grosswald.
Grosswald added that Levitt, whom he knew as Samuel Levitt, had helped out the congregation from time to time, including trying to sell the synagogue's scrolls when it was attempting to stay afloat.

Grosswald also said that Levitt had been in a car accident several years ago and now walks with a pronounced limp.

He said that these days, Levitt supports himself in part by getting work repairing damaged Torah scrolls.
Grosswald said that, for his part, he had never heard about the accusations against Levitt.

 

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Ex-teacher to face new sex abuse charge
Boston Globe - June 28, 2010
http://www.boston.com/yourtown/news/brookline/2010/06/ex-teacher_to_face_new_sex_abu.html

A former teacher at the Maimonides School in Brookline was charged yesterday with indecent assault and battery on a child during the 1970s, Suffolk District Attorney Daniel F. Conley said in a statement.

The grand jury indictment is the fifth charge for Stanley Z. Levitt, 64, of Philadelphia, a former Brighton resident. The victim in this case, and two others who came forward last fall, were 11-year-old students at the school while Levitt was employed there.

Four charges were brought against Levitt last year. The third person came forward recently after reading media reports about that case. Levitt will be arraigned Wednesday in Suffolk Superior Co

 

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Former Brookline Rabbi Faces Additional Sexual Assault Charges
Stanley Levitt accused of assaulting three young boys while teaching at Maimonides in the 1970s. 
By Neal Simpson 
Brookline Patch - June 29, 2010 

Prosecutors say a third victim has come forward with allegations of sexual abuse at the hands of Stanley Levitt, a 64-year-old rabbi who taught in Brookline in the 1970s.

Levitt already was already facing four charges of indecent assault and battery on a child stemming from alleged attacks on two separate victims in the mid 1970s. He is expected to be arraigned on the fifth charge in Suffolk Superior Court on June 30.

The latest victim reportedly came forward after reading media reports about Levitt's indictment on sexual assault charges late last year. Prosecutors say the victim was a sixth grader at the Maimonides School, where Levitt was briefly employed, when the attack occurred.

Levitt was indicted on the initial charges last year. In one case, prosecutes say Levitt assaulted an 11-year-old boy while he was being treated at Children's Hospital in Boston. The three other incidents allegedly occurred while a male student, also 11, was visiting Levitt's Chiswick Road home for three nights in 1975.

Prosecuters said there is no evidence that any of the alleged abuse occured on Maimonides school property.
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Rabbi Accused Of Assaulting Another Boy 

Man To Face Charges In Brighton Incident
WCVBTV (Boston) - June 30, 2010

A rabbi who once taught schoolchildren in Brookline was accused of assaulting a child in Brighton more than 30 years ago, bringing the number of his alleged victims to three.

Stanley Levitt, 64, of Philadelphia, was arraigned Wednesday on one charge of indecent assault and battery on a child, according to Suffolk County District Attorney Daniel F. Conley said. It is the fifth such indictment currently pending against him in Suffolk County.

Levitt was indicted late last year on four counts of the same offense representing offenses he allegedly committed upon two other boys. The latest victim came forward after viewing media reports of the prior cases, according to Assistant District Attorney Wayne Margolis.

Margolis said that the alleged abuse took place during the 1975-1976 academic year, when the victim was a student at the Maimonides School in Brookline.

Levitt, who lived on Chiswick Road in Brighton, taught at that school from 1974 to 1977. He left Massachusetts at some point thereafter, eventually making his way to Philadelphia.

"The victim recalls that he was invited with several other boys to attend a sleepover and study session at the defendant’s home," Margolis said. "The defendant instructed all the boys to shower before going to bed. When the victim exited the shower, the defendant was standing there with a towel and said he needed to towel the defendant off."

It was at that point that Levitt allegedly assaulted the boy, Margolis said.

Margolis led the grand jury investigation that resulted in the most recent indictment and the four that preceded it. Last year's indictments allege that Levitt went to visit one injured student in a Boston hospital and sexually assaulted him and that he assaulted a different boy three times during the course of a weekend visit to Levitt's home while the boy's parents were out of town. Those alleged incidents took place in 1975. All of the victims were about 11 years old.

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New Abuse Allegations Against Rabbi
Jewish Exponent - July 1, 2010
http://www.jewishexponent.com/article/21454/

A third man has stepped forward to accuse a rabbi living in Northeast Philadelphia with sexually abusing him more than 30 years ago in Massachusetts.

Rabbi Stanley Z. Levitt, 64, was charged in October with four counts of indecent assault and battery on a child for allegedly abusing two boys he'd taught at the Maimonides School, an Orthodox day school in Brookline, Mass.

According to Suffolk County District Attorney Daniel F. Conley, the third individual came forward to police after reading media accounts of the earlier cases. The man was a sixth grader when the incident allegedly took place in the mid-1970s, according to Conley.

Levitt was expected to be arraigned on the new charges this week in Suffolk County Superior Court. In October, he pleaded not guilty to the other charges and was released on $5,000 bail.

In an interview at the time, Levitt declared himself totally innocent and said, "The entire thing is horrendous; it's a nightmare."

The trial had been set to begin on July 12, but it will most likely be pushed back because of the new charges, according to Jake Wark, a spokesman for the district attorney's office.

Levitt, who has lived in Philadelphia on and off for about 30 years, has faced similar charges here, according to court records. Between August 2001 and May 2003, Levitt was arrested on separate occasions for alleging sexually assaulting three boys from the Rhawnhurst section of the Northeast.

In one case, Levitt entered a plea of no contest to misdemeanor charges and was sentenced to five years probation. Another case went to trial and resulted in a not-guilty verdict; charges were withdrawn in a third case.

No new charges have been filed in Philadelphia since then. Tasha Jamerson, spokeswoman for District Attorney Seth Williams, said that her office could not comment on whether or not any further investigation is under way.

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Former Maimonides Teacher Pleads Not Guilty to Latest Sexual Assault Charges
Prosecutors say Stanley Levitt assaulted three boys while teaching at the school in the 1970s. 
By Neal Simpson
Brookline Patch - June 30, 2010


A former Maimonides teacher is again out on bail after prosecutors added a fifth count of indecent assault and battery on a child to the 64-year-old rabbi's growing rap sheet.

Stanley Z. Levitt plead not guilty today to the latest charge, which prosecutors say stems from the allegations of a victim who came forward after hearing media reports of Levitt's indictment on sexual assault charges last year.

Levitt, a former Brighton resident who taught at Maimonides from 1974 to 1977, had already faced four charges of indecent assault and battery on a child stemming from alleged attacks on two separate victims during his years at Maimonides.

In one case, prosecutes say Levitt assaulted an 11-year-old boy while he was being treated at Children's Hospital in Boston. The three other incidents allegedly occurred while a male student, also 11, was staying at Levitt's Chiswick Road home in Brighton for three nights in 1975.

The latest victim told prosecutors he was also invited to stay at Levitt's home for a sleepover and study session in 1975 or 1976. Prosecutors allege Levitt assaulted the victim when he was leaving the shower during his stay.

Prosecutors said there is no evidence that any of the alleged abuse occurred on Maimonides school property.
Levitt was schedule to go to trial for the initial charges on July 12, but Suffolk County District Attorney Daniel F. Conley said he would likely reschedule the trial so prosecutor could join the latest indictment with the earlier case.

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Ex-Mass. rabbi arraigned again in child abuse
Associated Press / CBS-WHDH-TV - July 1, 2010

BOSTON -- A rabbi who once taught at a Boston-area school has been arraigned on a new child assault charge stemming from an incident that occurred more than 30 years ago. 

The Suffolk County district attorney's office says Stanley Z. Levitt of Philadelphia was arraigned Wednesday on a single count of indecent assault and battery on a child in Brighton. 

The 64-year-old was indicted late last year on four counts of the same offense for abuses he allegedly committed against two boys about 11 years old who attended the Maimonides School in Brookline, where he taught between 1974 and 1977. 

Prosecutors say the third person approached them after reading media accounts. Authorities say he also was a sixth grader at the school. 

It was not immediately clear if Levitt was represented by a lawyer.

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Sex-abuse case against rabbi raises larger issues
Boston Globe - July 20, 2010
By Michael Rezendes
http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2010/07/20/sex_abuse_case_against_rabbi_raises_larger_issues/

Two years ago, Michael Brecher came to prosecutors in Boston with a disturbing allegation: In the 1970s, he said, he had been molested by a rabbi who was teaching sixth grade at one of the region’s most prestigious Jewish day schools, the Maimonides School.

One of Brecher’s classmates came forward at the same time. And last year, after reading news accounts of indecent sexual assault and battery charges filed against Stanley Z. Levitt, a third person said that he, too, was abused by Levitt.

Now, court records show that Levitt might have tried to entice two more students into having intimate contact with him while they took showers in his Brighton home.

One of those former students has told Boston police that Levitt took him and other students on a field trip to Montreal where Levitt directed the students in a ritual purification bath, or mikvah, while all of them were naked, an inappropriate practice, according to an official at a prominent Jewish theological seminary.

Levitt has also faced allegations in Philadelphia, where he lived after leaving Maimonides.

The case, with echoes of clergy sexual abuse incidents in the Catholic Church, is a reflection, scholars say, of similar abuse cases that have taken place in the orthodox Jewish community, where rabbis are held in high regard and the social penalties for criticizing clergy can be high.

A number of prominent orthdox rabbis have faced charges, including Baruch Lanner, the subject of a 2000 expose in The Jewish Week, and Yehuda Kolko, who was featured in a 2006 New York magazine article.

“There is a growing acknowledgment that we have a problem, which has taken a long time,’’ said Yosef Blau, an Orthodox rabbi who is the spiritual adviser at the theological seminary at New York’s Yeshiva University. “Denial has been very powerful in the community.’’

Suffolk District Attorney Daniel F. Conley has charged Levitt, 64, with molesting three of the students, and the rabbi, now a Philadelphia resident free on $5,000 bail, has pleaded not guilty.

Neither Levitt nor his Boston attorney, Scott Curtis, returned messages from the Globe seeking comment on the allegations made by Maimonides School alumni. But court records show that Curtis is seeking to have the charges against Levitt dismissed based in part on “the age of the allegations.’’

Rabbi David Shapiro, the religious leader at Maimonides, who was an assistant principal in the mid-1970s, and Nathan Katz, the school’s executive director, declined to comment on the allegations by the former students.

Katz, however, issued a statement, saying, “Our hearts go out to the victims of child abuse and we are deeply saddened at the circumstances surrounding this matter, which took place in the mid-1970s.’’ He added that school officials take a variety of measures to ensure the safety of students, including criminal background checks of school employees. 

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Statement by Vicki Polin

The Awareness Center's Daily Newsletter -  July 25, 2010


A number of prominent orthodox rabbis have faced charges, including Baruch Lanner, the subject of a 2000 expose in The Jewish Week, and Yehuda Kolko, who was featured in a 2006 New York magazine article.

“There is a growing acknowledgment that we have a problem, which has taken a long time,’’ said Yosef Blau, an Orthodox rabbi who is the spiritual adviser at the theological seminary at New York’s Yeshiva University. “Denial has been very powerful in the community.’’

Suffolk District Attorney Daniel F. Conley has charged Levitt, 64, with molesting three of the students, and the rabbi, now a Philadelphia resident free on $5,000 bail, has pleaded not guilty.

Neither Levitt nor his Boston attorney, Scott Curtis, returned messages from the Globe seeking comment on the allegations made by Maimonides School alumni. But court records show that Curtis is seeking to have the charges against Levitt dismissed based in part on “the age of the allegations.’’

Rabbi David Shapiro, the religious leader at Maimonides, who was an assistant principal in the mid-1970s, and Nathan Katz, the school’s executive director, declined to comment on the allegations by the former students.

Katz, however, issued a statement, saying, “Our hearts go out to the victims of child abuse and we are deeply saddened at the circumstances surrounding this matter, which took place in the mid-1970s.’’ He added that school officials take a variety of measures to ensure the safety of students, including criminal background checks of school employees. 


Six years ago, Levitt pleaded no contest to molesting a boy living in an Orthodox Jewish community in Philadelphia and was later cited for violating probation when he refused treatment at an institute for sexual offenders.

“He basically flunked the sex offender course there because he refused to accept responsibility for what he did,’’ said Philadelphia Assistant District Attorney James Berardinelli, who prosecuted the case.

Activists seeking to raise awareness about sexual abuse by rabbis say the Levitt case is an opportunity for Jewish leaders to continue efforts to overcome the religious obstacles that have discouraged some victims from reporting abuse to police.

The obstacles include traditional Jewish rules, adhered to in some pockets of the Orthodox world, such as a prohibition against “chillul Hashem,’’ bringing shame on God’s name, and against “mesirah,’’ informing on fellow believers to secular authorities.

Marci A. Hamilton, a professor at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law and the author of “Justice Denied: What America Must Do to Protect its Children,’’ said strict adherence to those practices can create an environment where pedophiles flourish.

“If other adults are willing to keep their secrets, they can have multiple victims,’’ she said. “It’s horrifying.’’

Blau, who began his career as a teacher at Maimonides, in the 1960s, said the concept of mesirah is rooted in the history of the Jewish people, who were often persecuted while living in societies that officially sanctioned anti-Semitism. But he also said that the use of chillul Hashem and mesirah as reasons to avoid reporting sexual abuse by rabbis “is a misapplication of those laws,’’ an opinion underscored by the Rabbinical Council of America in a resolution approved at its convention earlier this year.

Researchers concerned about sexual abuse by rabbis attribute a gradual change in attitudes among orthodox Jews to websites and blogs where victims have felt free to discuss their abuse anonymously. They also cite the example of clergy abuse victims in the Catholic Church, who began speaking out in large numbers after the 2002 scandal in the Boston Archdiocese.

The case against Levitt began unfolding when Brecher and a New York man decided to approach law enforcement authorities in Boston. Brecher, 46, now a Maryland resident, said Levitt sexually abused him while he was a patient at Children’s Hospital recovering from a school accident.

The second man, a 46-year-old New Yorker who asked that his name be withheld, said Levitt molested him on three occasions in the shower area of his Brighton home during a three-night visit while his parents were on vacation. The Globe does not publish the names of alleged sexual abuse victims who wish to remain anonymous. 

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Former Brookline Rabbi Pleads Not Guilty to Sexual Assault Charges
A rabbi who taught in Brookline in the '70s plead not guilty to charges that he sexually assaulted children in a Brookline school. 
By Graham Turner
Brookline Patch - December 14, 2011

A 65-year-old former rabbi, Stanley Levitt, plead not guilty to the charges that he had molested children when he was teaching at the Maimonides school in Brookline in the mid-1970s.

The Globe reported earlier today that he was expected to plead guilty to the charges, and this would have been his first conviction, despite also being accused by three boys in Philadelphia.

The judge overseeing the case of the former rabbi was reportedly furious when he backed out of an expected plea deal earlier today. WCVB noted today that prosecutors had agreed to a probation sentence, but that if found guilty, he will serve time in prison.

Boston.com reports that, when asked if his sudden change of heart was discourteous to the victims, Levitt responded "I am the only victim here."

Last year, a third victim had come forward with charges against the former religious teacher, and he plead not guilty to that charge. He has also been accused by three other victims in the Philadelphia area, where he was living until recently. While the statute of limitations on this type of case is 35 years, the metaphorical clock stopped when he left the Commonwealth in the 1980s, allowing prosecutors to bring the case to court today.

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Former Brookline Rabbi Decides Not To Plead Guilty To Molesting Children

BOSTON (CBS) – A rabbi who once taught at a prestigious local school decided not to plead guilty Wednesday to molesting three young children in the 1970’s.

Rabbi Stanley Levitt, who taught at the Maimonides School in Brookline, would have been asked to serve three years probation for the guilty plea, but instead will go on trial next May.

The judge was angry with Levitt’s change-of-course decision, saying that the victims had traveled so far for nothing. Levitt was originally expected to enter a guilty plea.

WBZ NewsRadio 1030′s Carl Stevens said that one of the alleged victims called the rabbi “a coward” for backing out of the plea.

The case began when one of the rabbi’s students, Michael Brecher, told prosecutors that Levitt molested him when he was 11 years old.

The other two accusers have not gone public.

Levitt, who is now 65 years old, left the Boston area in 1980, so the statute of limitations did not run out.

He has been living in Baltimore recently.

He was indicted in 2009 on four counts of indecent assault and battery.
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Brookline rabbi pleads not guilty on molestation charges
by WCVB
Wicked Local - December 14, 2011

Judge Carol Ball said Rabbi Stanley Levitt, 65, "should have had the courtesy" to handle his decision differently and "added insult to injury" when he changed his mind at the last minute and decided not to plead guilty to four counts of indecent assault and battery.

The judge's anger was fueled by the fact that the three victims had traveled significant distances to be at the rabbi's sentencing to give victim impact statements.

Instead, the rabbi will go to trial on May 14.

The victims were all students at the Maimonides School in Brookline.

One of the victims said he was very disappointed but that he will come back to testify at the trial and tell the truth. His attorney, Mitchell Garabedian, said his client was revictimized by the rabbi's last-minute change of mind.

The prosecution had agreed to a sentence of probation, but sources said that was now off the table. If Levitt is convicted by a jury at trial, the government will recommend he be sent to prison.

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Rabbi Stanley Z. Levitt balks at plea deal in sex abuse case
Boston Globe - December 14, 2011 
A plea deal to resolve sex abuse charges at a prestigious Jewish day school collapsed at the last minute today when Rabbi Stanley Z. Levitt decided that he would not plead guilty to charges that he molested sixth-graders in the 1970s and instead would take his case before a jury.

Three alleged victims of Rabbi Levitt had been informed by Suffolk County prosecutors that Levitt was expected to plead guilty to four counts of indecent assault and battery on them when they were students at the Maimonides School in Brookline. But when Levitt appeared in Suffolk Superior Court this morning, his attorney informed the court that the rabbi would not plead guilty after all, prompting criticism from Judge Carol S. Ball for not letting the alleged victims know ahead of time.

“I would have hoped you or your client would have let these people know about the change before traveling to Boston for this event,” Ball said to Levitt’s attorney Scott Curtis. “It’s like adding insult to injury.”

Asked outside the courtroom if he had been discourteous to victims of sexual abuse, Levitt replied, “I am the only victim here.”

Levitt, a former religious studies teacher at the Maimonides, was indicted by a Suffolk grand jury two years ago after one of his students, Michael Brecher, told Suffolk prosecutors that Levitt molested him when he was an 11-year-old patient at Children’s Hospital Boston, and a second student said Levitt abused him in the shower of his Brighton home.

Under the plea deal, Levitt would have admitted that he molested three boys during the 1975-76 school year. He would have served no jail time under the deal, victims were told, but he would have received probation and been required to meet other conditions such as treatment for sex offenders.

Attorney Curtis defended his client’s change of heart, saying, “He thinks he’s innocent. I think he’s innocent. We’ll let a jury decide.”

Mitchell Garabedian, Brecher’s attorney, said his client is not giving up either. “He wants to go to trial. He will testify. He is a brave man.”

Scott Allen can be reached at allen@globe.com.
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Accused rabbi backs off plea deal
Boston Globe / WHDH-TV - December 14, 2011

A plea deal to resolve sex abuse charges at a prestigious Jewish day school collapsed at the last minute today when Rabbi Stanley Z. Levitt decided that he would not plead guilty to charges that he molested sixth-graders in the 1970s and instead would take his case before a jury.

Three alleged victims of Rabbi Levitt had been informed by Suffolk County prosecutors that Levitt was expected to plead guilty to four counts of indecent assault and battery on them when they were students at the Maimonides School in Brookline. But when Levitt appeared in Suffolk Superior Court this morning, his attorney informed the court that the rabbi would not plead guilty after all, prompting criticism from Judge Carol S. Ball for not letting the alleged victims know ahead of time.

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Baltimore Rabbi warns community about alleged sex offender: Rabbi Stanley Levitt
By Vicki Polin
Examiner - July 15, 2012



Rabbi Moshe Hauer / Rabbi Stanley Z. Levitt
Baltimore, MD -- Last week Rabbi Moshe Hauer released a letter which included a photograph of Rabbi Stanley Z. Levitt in hopes of protecting unsuspected children from harm. Rabbi Levitt was arrested back in 2009 in Boston and charged with sexually abusing students at a Jewish day school more then 30 years ago. Jury selection on Levitt criminal case begins on July 30, 2012 at the Suffolk County Superior Courthouse in Boston. Stanley Levitt currently resides in northeast Philadelphia, but also maintains a residence in Baltimore, MD

According to Hauer’s letter, Levitt is not allowed in any orthodox synagogue except for Shearith Israel Congregation (also known as the Glenn Ave. Shul), which is under the leadership of Rabbi Yaakov Hopfer. The letter continued by assuring the Baltimore community that Stanley Levitt would be closely monitored when going in the hallways and or the restroom, that he was mandated to be accompanied by another adult. Due to the seriousness of the allegations pending against Levitt in Boston, he is not allowed to get into any in synagogue service such as reading a Torah portion, saying any blessings to the congregation, etc. This is an amazing unprecedented response to be getting from the ultra-orthodox community in Baltimore.

Several community members in the Baltimore orthodox community voiced their concerns regarding the fact that Rabbi Yaakov Hopfer is in charge of monitoring Levitt. His synagogue has been known to be a harbor for other alleged and convicted sex offenders residing within the eruv (ultra-orthodox Jewish community) of Baltimore. In the past it has been reported that Rabbi Hopfer attempted to conduct his own investigations regarding allegations of sex crimes, instead of encouraging community members to make hotline and police reports. One such case in which many believe there was an obstruction of justice is the case of Rabbi Eliezer Eisgrau, who is the principal of the Torah Institute (TI) of Baltimore. Allegations arouse several years ago that Eisgrau had allegedly molested his daughter. When a police detective attempted to investigate the case he was told that no one knew who Eisgrau or his daughter was. A reliable source stated that community members were instructed by rabbi Hopfer along with other members of the Vaad of Baltimore (Jewish religious court) not to assist law enforcement officials in this matter. The fear was that letting the rest of the world know that problems like this existed in the charedi world, could bring on another pogrom or holocaust.

Recently, a Hillel rabbi from Baltimore came into possession of a Torah (Jewish bible) from the holocaust. He was looking for someone who was trained to repair the scroll. Rabbi Stanley Levitt is a trained sofer stam (scribe) and had the qualifications needed to do the repairs. According to standard policies an individual who handles a Torah has to do so within the guidelines of purity, which includes going to a mikvah (ritual bath), prior to doing the work.

When Levitt applied to do the repairs on the holocaust Torah, he was interviewed three times prior to his application for the work was sent off the information to a Vaad in London (Jewish religious court). Immediately a member of the Vaad did a "Google search" of him, and learned of the allegations made against him along with the pending court case, which was found on The Awareness Center’s website. This was enough information for the Vaad to choose someone else to do the work.

Even though the Vaad of Baltimore has been aware of the allegations made against Levitt for several years it took the son of the Hillel rabbi to have the letter sent out by Hauer to be sent out. The truth is protecting children is everyone’s responsibility. According to Jewish law, every adult is a mandated reporter. If you suspect a child is at risk of harm, pick up the phone and call your local child abuse hotline. It is the only way to ensure that offenders are taken off the streets and that our children stand a chance at being safe.


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Rabbi admits to charges of abusing students at Brookline school during 1970s, authorities say
Boston Globe - August 1, 2012 

A former Brighton resident admitted in Suffolk Superior Court today that he sexually abused three boys while he was working as a religious teacher at the Maimonides School in Brookline in the 1970s.

Rabbi Stanley Z. Levitt, most recently of Philadelphia, pleaded guilty as his trial on four counts of indecent assault and battery on a child was set to begin. Last December, Levitt had agreed to plead guilty, but abruptly changed his mind at the last minute.

In a hallway interview at the time, Levitt told the Globe, “the only victim here is me.”

Now, the 66-year-old Leavitt faces sentencing Thursday morning in the Boston courthouse.
According to Suffolk District Attorney Daniel F. Conley’s office, Leavitt admitted molesting sixth grade students at the Maimonides School during three separate incidents that took place in Boston.

Two of the assaults took place at Levitt’s home on Chiswick Road in Brighton; the third occurred while the child was recuperating at Children's Hospital in Boston. All three were 11-year-old boys,  and the assaults took place during the 1975-76 school year, the Globe has reported.

“This is a victory not just for the victims in this case, but for every person who suffered abuse at the hands of a trusted adult,” Conley said in a statement. “The defendant’s full admission of guilt is proof positive that the men he abused as children were telling the truth when they finally shared the terrible secret they’d kept for so long.
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Rabbi pleads guilty to sexually assaulting boys

By Matt Stout  |   Wednesday, August 1, 2012  
Boston Herald 
Convicted Sex Offender - Rabbi Stanley Levitt
A Philadelphia rabbi accused of preying on young boys in the 1970s — assaulting them in the hospital and in sleepovers at his former Brighton home — today pleaded guilty to multiple counts of sexual assault, ending the case just as it was about to go to trial.
Stanley Levitt, 66, faces up to 40 years in prison when a judge sentences him tomorrow on four counts of indecent assault and battery on a child, according to the Suffolk County district attorney’s office. Prosecutors say they will seek prison time.
A trial for the former Brookline religious teacher was scheduled to start today.

According to authorities, all three of Levitt’s victims were sixth-grade students in 1975 and 1976 at a Jewish day school, where he taught in the mid-1970s. Two originally came forward with accusations that led to set of 2009 indictments, while the third came forward later, telling police Levitt assaulted him during a sleepover when the rabbi told him to take a shower before bed.

“The defendant’s full admission of guilt is proof that the men he abused as children were telling the truth when they finally shared their terrible secret,” Suffolk County District Attorney Dan Conley said in a statement.

According to prosecutors, one student had been hospitalized after injuring his hand in an accident and was recuperating at Children’s Hospital in Boston when visited him in his hospital room and assaulted him.

A second victim was assaulted twice in 1975 during a weekend visit to Levitt’s former Chiswick Road home while the boy’s parents were out of town.

Levitt’s attorney was not immediately available for comment. Levitt was originally set to plead guilty to the charges in December 2011, but backed out last minute, saying he wanted to go to trial.
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Rabbi admits to sex abuse of students in 1970s
AP  / August 1, 2012

Convicted Sex Offender - Rabbi Stanley Levitt
BOSTON (AP) — Authorities say a rabbi admitted to sexually abusing three students while working in the Boston area as a religious teacher in the 1970s.

Suffolk County District Attorney Daniel Conley said Stanley Levitt’s trial on four counts of indecent assault and battery on a child was set to begin when the defendant pleaded guilty on Wednesday.

A judge is scheduled to sentence Levitt on Thursday.

Prosecutors say the 66-year-old Philadelphia man lived in Boston and worked in Brookline when he abused three boys in his care.

A grand jury indicted him in 2009 after two victims disclosed Levitt assaulted them in 1975 while they were his students. A third victim later came forward.

Authorities say Levitt assaulted one of the victims in a Boston hospital room while visiting after the boy hurt his hand in an accident.

Two assaults to another victim happened at Levitt’s Boston home while that boy’s parents were out of town for the weekend, according to prosecutors.

Another victim’s assault also took place at the rabbi’s home while he was there for a sleepover, the district attorney’s office said.

Conley called the defendant’s plea proof that the men who shared their secrets about being abused as sixth-graders were telling the truth.

‘‘This is a victory not just for the victims in this case, but for every person who suffered abuse at the hands of a trusted adult,’’ the district attorney said in a statement.

Levitt’s attorney couldn’t be reached by phone Wednesday.
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Brookline rabbi pleads guilty to child sexual abuse
Wicked Local - August 1, 2012


Rabbi Stanley Levitt, 66, most recently of Philadelphia, pleaded guilty to four counts of indecent assault and battery on a child as the trial was set to begin, according to a release from the Suffolk DA’s office. He will be sentenced Aug. 2.

Had the case made it to trial, Assistant District Attorney David Deakin would have shown that Levitt had sexually assaulted three sixth-grade boys during the mid-1970s.

“This is a victory, not just for the victims in this case, but for every person who suffered abuse at the hands of a trusted adult,” Conley said. “The defendant’s full admission of guilt is proof that the men he abused as children were telling the truth when they finally shared their terrible secret.”

In 2009, two victims reported that Levitt had molested them while they were students at Maimonides, where he taught from 1974 to 1977.

In one case, Levitt assaulted a student at Children’s Hospital Boston, where the boy was recuperating after injuring his hand in an accident, the DA said. Another victim was assaulted twice during a weekend visit to Levitt’s then-Brighton home while the boy’s parents were out of town. Both incidents happened in 1975, according to the release.
After indictments were handed down for those incidents, a third man came forward to report he had been abused during 1975-1976 school year, when he attended a sleepover at Levitt’s home. Levitt reportedly assaulted the student after telling him to shower before bed.

In 2006, the statute of limitations on child sexual abuse was extended from 15 to 27 years, allowing older cases like those of Levitt’s victims to be prosecuted. Conley was behind those efforts to change the law. However, because Levitt left Massachusetts, the clock stopped on the statute of limitations anyway, the release said.
Scott Curtis represented Levitt.
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Convicted sex offender Rabbi Stanley Z. Levitt and the Vaad of Baltimore
By Vicki Polin
Examiner - AUGUST 1, 2012

Rabbi Stanley Z. Levitt

Earlier today Rabbi Stanley Levitt plead guilty to sexually assaulting several young boys back in the 1970s. The assaults occurred in a Boston area hospital and another at a sleepover in his Brighton, MA home.

Tomorrow morning 66 year-old Levitt could face up to 40 years in prison on the four counts of indecent assault and battery on a child. According to reports, prosecutors on this case say they are seeking prison time.

View slideshow: Convicted sex offender Rabbi Stanley Z. Levitt and the Vaad of Baltimore
Over the last several years Rabbi Stanley Levitt resided in both Philadelphia and Baltimore.

Since 2009, The Awareness Center (International Jewish Coalition Against Sexual Abuse/Assault), started warning the Vaad Harabonim Baltimore (Jewish Religious Court) of the serious nature of allegations made against Rabbi Levitt. The organization requested that the Vaad help to warn community members of the dangers . . . and also publish suggested protocols in hopes of protecting unsuspecting children from becoming the next victim of this (now convicted) sexual predator. Unfortunately, nothing was done.

Rabbi Moshe Hauer
On July 15th an article was written and published stating that Baltimore Vaad member -- Rabbi Moshe Hauer wrote a letter to the community warning them about Rabbi Stanley Levitt. Unfortunately, due to political games often played by rabbonim in the ultra-orthodox world -- the scheduled letter was never mailed.

According to a reliable source at the last minute due to political pressures, Rabbi Hauer decided not to send the letter to community members, and later appeared to be holding the letter hostage as a means of having the article removed from the internet. At the time there were numerous phone calls and emails in which threats were made against the author of the article. Some of these threats were made by a highly respected social worker who runs the Shofar Coalition, which is an organization connected with the Jewish Federation of Baltimore.

The truth is that like in many other ultra-orthodox Jewish communities religious leaders in Baltimore have an extended history of protecting alleged and convicted sex offenders and then shaming, blaming and then harassing survivors and their family members who make police reports without their permission or speak out.

It is well known in Baltimore’s religious circles, that Shearith Israel Congregation (also known as the Glenn Ave. Shul), is the “Davening Headquarters” for both alleged and convicted sex offenders.

Rabbi Yaakov Hopfer
Besides Rabbi Levitt calling this synagogue home, so does Cantor Stuart Friedman, Rabbi Yaakov Menken, Rabbi Eliezer Eisgrau and from time to time Rabbi Moshe Eisemann.

The "Glenn Avenue Shul" is under the leadership of Rabbi Yaakov Hopfer, who is also the long time president of the Vaad Harbonim of Baltimore.

Rabbi Yaakov Hopfer is also known as the “go to rabbi” when it comes to protecting sexual predators. A perfect example of this was seen in the case of Samuel (Shmuel) Juravel, a young man who was caught in an internet sting back in 2005.

Shmuel Juravel
When Shmuel was younger it was known by the Vaad that he was molesting younger boys within the Baltimore community. Instead of making police or hotline reports, the Vaad “monitored his behavior” and also assisted in helping him find a bride when he was old enough to marry.

According to a reliable source, after Shmuel Juravel left Baltimore and relocated to Atlanta -- Rabbi Hopfer contacted the Atlanta area Vaad, and informed them of the allegations of child molestation. No hotline or police reports were ever made. Instead the Atlanta rabbis felt they could monitor Juravel on their own. Their monitoring included allowing this sexual predator to teach bar mitzvah lessons to eleven-year-old boys from within their community.

Knowing how the Vaad of Baltimore operated, it was not a big surprise that Rabbi Stanley Levitt made Baltimore his second home.
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Boston area rabbi, Stanley Levitt, admits sexually abusing 3 students
Associated Press - August 01, 2012

BOSTON – Authorities say a rabbi admitted to sexually abusing three students while working in the Boston area as a religious teacher in the 1970s.

Suffolk County District Attorney Daniel Conley said Stanley Levitt’s trial on four counts of indecent assault and battery on a child was set to begin when the defendant pleaded guilty on Wednesday.

A judge is scheduled to sentence Levitt on Thursday.

Prosecutors say the 66-year-old Philadelphia man lived in Boston and worked in Brookline when he abused three boys in his care.

A grand jury indicted him in 2009 after two victims disclosed Levitt assaulted them in 1975 while they were his students. A third victim later came forward.

Authorities say Levitt assaulted one of the victims in a Boston hospital room while visiting after the boy hurt his hand in an accident.

Two assaults to another victim happened at Levitt’s Boston home while that boy’s parents were out of town for the weekend, according to prosecutors.

Another victim’s assault also took place at the rabbi’s home while he was there for a sleepover, the district attorney’s office said.

Conley called the defendant’s plea proof that the men who shared their secrets about being abused as sixth-graders were telling the truth.

“This is a victory not just for the victims in this case, but for every person who suffered abuse at the hands of a trusted adult,” the district attorney said in a statement.

Levitt’s attorney couldn’t be reached by phone Wednesday. 
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Victim savors conviction of pedophile rabbi
By Matt Stout
Boston Herald - Thursday, August 2, 2012

A man once targeted by the pedophile rabbi who pleaded guilty yesterday to preying on boys in the 1970s said he’s relishing the chance to face the “sick man” who used his power as a Brookline religion teacher.

“I don’t have any hope of retribution, I don’t want any revenge ... but I have no problem facing him whatsoever,” Michael Brecher, now 48, told the Herald, saying he will address the court when Rabbi Stanley Levitt, 66, is sentenced today in Suffolk Superior court on four counts of indecent assault and battery on a child.

Levitt’s guilty plea comes roughly eight months after he initially was expected to admit to the decades-old abuse, but balked at the last minute.

“The only gift that came out of that for me was when the judge called a recess, I got the opportunity to stand in front of him, and that was the most powerful moment of my life,” Brecher recalled, adding a friend eventually pulled him away. “I would have said, ‘Look me in the eye, you coward.’

He could not even look at me. Until that point, I had compassion for him. He’s a sick man.”

Levitt, who now lives in Philadelphia, faces up to 40 years in prison.

Prosecutors say that they will push for prison time.

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Rabbi admits molesting schoolboys
By Wesley Lowery
Boston Globe - August 2, 2012 
Decades after abusing three boys at a Jewish private school in Brookline, Rabbi Stanley Z. Levitt will hear directly from his victims for the first time Thursday. Levitt, 66, pleaded guilty Wednesday to four counts of indecent assault and battery on a child. He could receive up to 40 years in prison when a judge sentences him Thursday morning. In court Wednesday, Levitt admitted that he molested sixth-grade students at the Maimonides School during three separate incidents during the 1975-76 school year, authorities said.

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No jail time for Rabbi Stanley Levitt
Examiner - August 2, 2012
By Vicki Polin 

BOSTON -- Yesterday, Rabbi Stanley Levitt plead guilty to sexually assaulting three boys in a case dating back to the 1970s. Today, prosecutors requested that Rabbi Levitt be sentenced to 2 1/2 years behind bars, instead a Suffolk Superior Court only sentenced him to 10 years probation.

Two of the assaults took place in Levitt's home. The third occurred in a hospital room where the was child recuperating after he had injured his hand.

Even though the statute of limitations is only 27 years in the State of MA, because Levitt moved out of state, the clock stopped ticking, which allowed prosecutors to move forward bring this case to court nearly 30 years later.

This was not the first time that Rabbi Levitt faced charges of child molestation. In 1980, Levitt fled Boston and relocated to Philadelphia. Within a few years new allegations were made against Levitt in which he allegedly molested three more boys. In one of those cases Levitt was found not guilty. In the second case in Philadelphia, Levitt plead no contest and received five-year sentence of probation. The third allegation of molestation was withdrawn.

Considering this was not Stanley Z. Levitt's first conviction, it is shocking to learn he did not receive any jail time.
It is unknown if Levitt will be serving his probation in Philadelphia, PA or in his home in Baltimore, MD.

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Rabbi awaits child molestation sentence

NECN News - August 2, 2012


(NECN: Justin Michaels, Boston) - A Massachusetts rabbi was expected to appear in court Thursday - to learn how much time he will spend behind bars for molesting young boys decades ago. Rabbi Stanley Levitt was scheduled to be sentenced at Suffolk Superior Court on four counts of indecent assault and battery on a child. He pleaded guilty to the charges on Wednesday. About eight months ago, Rabbi Levitt was reportedly planning to officially admit his guilt in court, but then took it back. This time, he followed through with his guilty plea to the four counts. If he hadn't pleaded guilty, his trial on those counts would have begun on Wednesday. If the case had gone to trial, the DA's office had evidence that Levitt sexually assaulted three middle school boys during the mid-70s when he was working as a religious teacher in Brookline. Back in 2009, two of the victims said that Levitt molested them while they were his students. Soon after, another victim came forward. In one case, Levitt assaulted a boy at Boston's Children Hospital while the boy was recuperating after injuring his hand. The victims may not have had their days in court, if it weren't for a 2006 ruling, extending the statute of limitations on child sex abuse from 15 to 27 years, allowing for older cases like this one to be filed.

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Rabbi given probation, not jail in sex assault case
By Matt Stout
Boston Herald - Thursday, August 2, 2012 


The pedophile rabbi who admitted to molesting three young boys in the 1970s was sentenced to 10 years probation today in Suffolk Superior Court, a possibility one of his victims said he was told to expect.

Prosecutors say they asked that Stanley Levitt, 66, be sentenced to 2 ½ years behind bars after he pleaded guilty to four counts of indecent assault and battery on a child.

The rabbi, who lives in Philadelphia, yesterday admitted to sexually assaulting three sixth-grade boys while he working as a Brookline religious teacher more than three decades ago.

Michael Brecher, one of Levitt’s victims, told the Herald yesterday prosecutors told him to prepare himself for a sentence that included only probation, a fate Levitt received after pleading no contest to similar charges out of Philadelphia in 2004.

On the Boston charges, Levitt faced up to 40 years in prison on the four separate counts, according to prosecutors.

Brecher, now 48, called Levitt a “sick man” who in December had indicated he would plead guilty to the charges, but balked at the last minute.

According to authorities, all three of Levitt’s victims were sixth-grade students in 1975 and 1976 when he molested them at his former Brighton home and one while he recovered from a hand injury at a local hospital.

Two, including Brecher, originally came forward with accusations that led a 2009 indictment, while a third came forward later, telling police Levitt assaulted him during a sleepover when the rabbi told him to take a shower before bed.



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Can we trust the rabbonim of Baltimore to really monitor Rabbi Stanley Levitt?

By Vicki Polin
Examiner - August 3, 2012

Yesterday Rabbi Stanley Levitt received 10 years probation and is required to register as a sex offender, after pleading guilty on charges of sexually assaulting 3 boys in Boston. It's been reported that he’ll also have to wear a ankle monitoring device. If he violates any of the terms of his probation he will end up in jail. According to a reliable source, Levitt has chosen Baltimore, MD as his place of residence.

After the sentencing hearing one of the individuals who was victimized by Levitt stated: “this will mean that another life will be ruined for him to end up in prison, and I went through all of this so that wouldn’t be the case. . . All we can do is hope he violates his probation without harming another child.”

The issue still remains of how prepared the ultra-orthodox community of Baltimore will be to keep the children in their community safe? Considering the track history of being non-compliant with Jewish law, which requires all adults to be mandated reporters, let alone stonewalling law enforcement officials during several past investigations of possible child molestation, one has to realize that the Baltimore orthodox community is becoming a sort of mecca for Jewish sexual predators residing in the United States.

Shmuel Zev Juravel is a quintessential example of how ineffective rabbinical "monitoring" is of sex offenders, especially in Baltimore’s ultra-orthodox community. Juravel was known by Rabbi Yaakov Hopfer to have molested many boys within the eruv (Jewish community), but was never reported to the secular authorities, as he comes from an internationally highly respected, prestigious rabbinical family, who had strong ties to the Baltimore community. When Shmuel Juravel moved to Savannah, GA, Rabbi Hopfer notified the Orthodox rabbi there that Mr. Juravel should be "monitored" around children.

At the time Shmuel Juravel was married with four sons of his own. It didn’t stop him from allegedly molesting several other boys in the Savannah community as well. He was finally stopped by the FBI in an internet sting operation for soliciting boys on Craigs List and then crossing state lines to meet the alleged victim. The now, 35 year-old inmate is now incarcerated, serving a 22 year sentence in the federal prison system in Otisville, NY. He’s scheduled to be released on March 28, 2024.

The Awareness Center is the international Jewish Coalition Against Sexual Abuse/Assault. Since 2001 they have attempted to warn the Baltimore community about numerous alleged and convicted sexual predators from within their own community. Unfortunately, their cries have been ignored. Besides Shmuel Juravel, The Awareness Center has attempted to warned not only community members, but also the Vaad Harabonim (orthodox board of rabbis), in which Rabbi Hopfer is president.

Rabbi Moshe Eisemann is a 76-year-old, highly respected author and religious leader. For many years he was the Mashgiach Ruchni (head spiritual advisor) at Ner Israel High School and College. According to a reliable source, throughout the years at Ner Israel, there were mumblings of him molesting boys (both minors and those slightly past their 18th birthdays). Instead of making hotline or police reports, the administration at Ner Israel decided to handle the allegations quietly and internally.

Instead of doing the right thing, Ner Israel did what many prestigious organizations, institutions and schools do around the globe -- they shifted the alleged offender to another position -- yet allowed Eisemann to live on the high school/college campus and also allowed him to privately tutor students in his home -- without any type of supervision.
Back in 2006, The Awareness Center did their best to publicize the allegations made against Rabbi Moshe Eisemann of the molestation of teenage boys including the few who were molested who were over the age of 18. At the time hotline reports were made, yet due to the fact that none of the alleged victims resided in his home, and the investigators were stonewalled, nothing could be done.

In 2007, after the exposé, "Ner Israel Rabbi Alleged Abuser: When Whispers Get Louder" was published by the Baltimore Jewish times, The Awareness Center put out a call for action, which five years later has still been ignored.

The organization demanded the following protocols be set up to keep students safe:
  1. Rabbi Moshe Eisemann immediately be move off the campus of Ner Israel.
  2. Rabbi Eisemann cease teaching and or tutoring students in his home or else where.
  3. Rabbi Moshe Eisemann have absolutely no contact with children or male adults under the age of 40. (According to Jewish custom, forty is the age in which a man is considered mature enough to study Kabbalah and less likely be able to be sexually manipulated by an sexual predator).
  4. Rabbi Moshe Eisemann be immediately evaluated by a licensed mental health professional who specializes in sex offenders. The professional must be approved by The Awareness Center, Inc. to insure the professional is not biased nor associated with Ner Israel any other individual or organization.
  5. Artscroll/Mesorah publications cease and desist from publishing, selling or distributing any books created by Moshe Eisemann.
  6. All books written by Moshe Eisemann be banned by every yeshiva (seminaries) in the US and abroad.
  7. Rabbi Moshe Eisemann not be allowed to leave the United States.
  8. Ner Israel Rabbinical College finance a team of child abuse experts who will evaluate all past and present students of Rabbi Moshe Eisemann to determine if there are any more survivors. The team of experts will be approved by The Awareness Center to insure things are handled properly and appropriately.
Considering the track record of Baltimore’s orthodox Jewish religious leaders of doing nothing to protect the community from sexual predators, it’s difficult to believe that anything has change. Needless to say, without public outcry nothing will change and individuals like Rabbi Stanley Levitt will continue to offend.
The Awareness Center also asks that the following individuals be contacted:
President of the Vaad of Baltimore:
Rabbi Yaakov Hopfer - Shearith Yisrael (Glen Ave. Shul):
Phone: 410-466-3060 Fax: 410-367-9183
Ner Israel Rabbinical College (and High School):
Phone: 410-484-7200
Rabbi Aharon Feldman - Rosh Yeshiva (Head of the School)
Rabbi Beryl Weisbord - Dean of Students
Rabbi Sheftel Neuberger - President
Artscroll/Mesorah Publications
Phone: 718-921-9000 Fax: 718-680-1875
Rabbi Nosson Scherman, the General Editor
Meir Zlotowitz - Founder of Artscroll Publications

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Thank you Rabbi Hopfer for warning the community!
Examiner - August 14, 2012
By Vicki Polin

August 5, 2012 -- (Baltimore MD) A letter written by Rabbi Yaakov Hopfer was posted on the wall of several synagogues in the ultra-orthodox Jewish community of Baltimore, warning neighbors of the dangers Rabbi Stanley (Zusia) Levitt posed to children in the community. Hopfer’s letter included a photograph of this convicted sexual predator.
Around July 15th a letter was supposed to be sent out by Rabbi Moshe Hauer. Due to to political pressures from the Vaad of Harabonim of Baltimore (ultra-orthodox board of rabbis), Hauer’s letter was never sent. It’s important to note that Rabbi Yaakov Hopfer is the president of the Vaad of Harabonim, and also the spiritual leader of the Glenn Avenue Shul, in which Rabbi Levitt prays three times a day.

On August 1st, Levitt plead guilty to sexually assaulting several young boys back in the 1970s. The assaults occurred in a Boston area hospital and another at a sleepover in his Brighton, MA home. A Suffolk Superior Court sentenced Levitt to 10 years probation, and will be making Baltimore his official residence.

Since 2002, The Awareness Center (the international Jewish Coalition Against Sexual Abuse/Assault) had been demanding that the Vaad of Baltimore not only write letters warning community members of both alleged and convicted sex offenders living and praying in synagogues within the ultra-orthodox community, yet also publish protocols for alleged and convicted sex offenders to follow when present in synagogues, schools or other gathering places where children may be present.
Perhaps Hopfer’s letter is a sign that things are changing and that the community will finally put protecting children first.

Letter written by Rabbi Yaakov Hopfer regarding convicted sex offender, Rabbi Stanley Levitt

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Maryland Sex Offender Registry
August 12, 2012
http://www.dpscs.state.md.us/sorSearch/search.do?searchType=detail&anchor=false&id=7701558



1 comment:

  1. I have known this man for years and am totally shocked by this. I know him as a kind man,a always there to help. I know of people 1st hand who he has helped... Horrible story and sad for everyone involved.

    ReplyDelete