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Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Synagogue asks alleged child molester to stand down
















A SECURITY guard accused of sexually abusing boys from an Orthodox Jewish school in St Kilda East has been asked to stand down from the board of management of an Elwood synagogue until a police investigation into alleged paedophilia at the school is completed.

Several former students of Yeshivah College have lodged statements to police alleging they were molested by David Cyprys, a security guard who also taught karate.

The Elwood Talmud Torah Congregation, an Orthodox synagogue, has asked Mr Cyprys to stand down from his role as a committee member on the board of management.

President Hilton Meinrath told The Age Mr Cyprys had been a part of the synagogue for a number of years and they had never received any complaints.

Mr Meinrath said Mr Cyprys had a current government permit to work with children. But he said he had asked him to stand down voluntarily until the police investigation into alleged abuse at Yeshivah College was over. ''We will not take any further action until we know one way or another,'' Mr Meinrath said.

Mr Cyprys continued to work alongside children at Yeshivah Centre, which runs the school, despite pleading guilty to indecent assault in 1992. No conviction was recorded, but he was fined $1500 and ordered to be of good behaviour.

The former Yeshivah Centre director, Rabbi Yitzchok Dovid Groner, was told of sexual abuse complaints against Mr Cyprys as early as 1996. Mr Cyprys's private security licence states he is employed by Yeshivah Centre.

Yeshivah Centre did not respond to questions from The Age about whether it currently employs Mr Cyprys. But in a letter to parents, Yeshivah College principal Rabbi Yehoshua Smukler said the school had been advised by police that the allegations and investigations did not relate to a member of staff.

Earlier this month, Jewish community leader Manny Waks spoke to The Age about sexual abuse he says he was subjected to between 1988 and 1991. It can now be revealed Mr Cyprys is one of the alleged perpetrators.

Mr Waks said he spoke out in the hope it would encourage others to speak to police, or to seek help. Several other alleged victims are believed to have subsequently spoken to police.

Mr Waks said he wanted to hold to account both the alleged perpetrators and Yeshivah Centre, which he said betrayed victims by persuading them to remain silent.

He made his first statement to police about Mr Cyprys and another man in 1996. He also told Rabbi Groner, the centre director at the time.

In 2000, Mr Waks said, he was horrified to see Mr Cyprys was still providing security for Yeshivah Centre. ''It was just appalling. I said to Rabbi Groner: 'How can you have that person here having access to children and doing security for the synagogue?' Rabbi Groner pleaded with me not to go public with it. He said: 'I'm looking after this; he is getting help.' ''

Police wrote to former Yeshivah College students earlier this year, urging them to contact Crime Stoppers if they had been assaulted between 1989 and 1993. The investigation was mainly linked to former teacher David Kramer, who fled Australia in the early 1990s after parents complained he had sexually abused students. Police hope to extradite Kramer when he has served a seven-year prison sentence in the US for sodomising a 12-year-old boy.

However, police have also been contacted by former Yeshivah students who allege they were sexually abused by other members of the Chabad-Lubavitch community, including Mr Cyprys. The Age believes the police have not recently spoken with Mr Cyprys.

Lawyers for Mr Cyprys have served Mr Waks with a ''concerns notice'', alleging an email he wrote to 23 people titled ''sexual abuse at Yeshivah'' was defamatory.

In a letter to Mr Waks, solicitor Barrie Goldsmith alleged the email was defamatory because it imputed Mr Cyprus committed sexual abuse and was being investigated for committing sexual abuse.

Mr Waks said the letter demonstrated the ''unconscionable, unrepentant and vicious nature of this individual … I and some of his other victims look forward to our day in court.''

Mr Cyprys did not respond to inquiries from The Age.

5 comments:

  1. There is a lot more to this as meets the eye. If he is guilty then he certainly should face the consequences - but if he is innocent then his life and the life of his two innocent children has been affected in a major way.
    Those of us who know him well, in both a personal and professional capacity, are very doubtful that these charges are true.

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  2. He's guilty. I know. After trial everyone will know..I just pray he never touched his own children as well..Thats what will have affected their life.

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  3. Nifty, sadly, even with intensive psychotherapy, the statistics of pedophiles re-offending is extremely high. Cyprus did admit to being a child predator in the past, and should have been removed from access to children immediately and permanently. Your concern should be for the protection of the children, not for the perpetrator. Those who are speaking out and telling their stories to prevent further atrocities in the community are brave and admirable and should be supported publicly. If you are not part of the solution, you are part of the problem.

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  4. Has anyone asked why Waks is 'coming forward' now? After all this time?
    Perhaps he has an agenda?
    This is so unfair what is happening to this innocent man. I have known him personally and his family for well over 2 decades. He is an honest and trustworthy man who is devoted to his kids and this community - the same community that is now stabbing him in the back. Stop the lies!

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  5. Waks is coming forward now because Groner and Chaim Gutnick are gone. There is no one in power now left to protect Cyprys and to silence Waks

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