Israel’s Child Predator Protection Racket — and AIPAC’s Role in Covering It Up
August 21, 2025
The Epstein files pulled back the curtain on how the rich and powerful protect child abusers. Billionaires, politicians, and celebrities leveraged their influence to bury evidence of exploitation. But Epstein’s network was not an isolated scandal.
New revelations show that Israel itself has become a shield for predators — and that AIPAC’s grip on U.S. politics ensures accountability is almost impossible.
What the FBI Sting Revealed
Earlier this month, Tom Artiom Alexandrovich, a senior cyber official in Netanyahu’s government, was arrested in Las Vegas. According to federal authorities, he thought he was arranging sex with a 15-year-old girl. Instead, he walked into a sting operation run by the FBI, Homeland Security, and Nevada police.
He was charged with a felony and booked into Henderson County Jail. For a brief moment, justice seemed within reach.
But within 48 hours, Alexandrovich was back in Israel.
Why? Because the Trump White House personally intervened at Israel’s request to override federal agents. Investigators who had spent weeks building the case said they “couldn’t believe it.” Their work to protect children was erased overnight to protect a foreign official.
A Leaked Database of Protection
The Alexandrovich case is not a one-off. In fact, it fits into a disturbing pattern.
Journalists uncovered a leaked spreadsheet from Israel’s Ministry of Justice, hidden in last year’s “Anonymous of Justice” leaks. The document listed 2,152 international legal requests that Israel had delayed or ignored.
Many of these requests involved child sexual abuse cases in the United States.
The implication is chilling: predators who should be on trial in U.S. courts are instead living freely in Israel, shielded from justice by political deals and bureaucratic stonewalling.
Why U.S. Politicians Stay Silent
On one issue, Americans across the political spectrum usually agree: zero tolerance for child abuse. Yet when Israel is involved, members of Congress suddenly lose their outrage.
The reason is clear — AIPAC’s money.
Haley Stevens beamed alongside Netanyahu after AIPAC bought her seat in Congress.
Ritchie Torres bends over backwards to smear anyone who questions Israel’s policies.
Josh Gottheimer weaponizes false accusations of antisemitism to silence debate.
Wesley Bell, installed after AIPAC spent millions to defeat Cori Bush, allowed police to assault anti-genocide protesters at his own town hall.
This silence isn’t accidental. It’s purchased.
The Consequences for U.S. Justice
What does it mean when Israel can block over 2,000 legal requests from the United States, many involving child predators? It means our justice system is being undermined. It means victims are denied accountability. It means law enforcement officers who risk their careers on these cases see their work erased by political deals.
And it sends a dangerous message: if you are wealthy, powerful, or politically useful, even crimes against children can be excused.
Beyond Predators: The Larger Pattern
Israel’s protection of predators is part of a broader pattern. While Netanyahu’s government shields abusers, it also kills an average of 28 children a day in Gaza. The same networks of political protection and silence apply to both.
At home, AIPAC keeps American politicians in line with campaign cash and smear campaigns. Abroad, Israel operates with impunity. The victims — whether children in U.S. communities or children in Gaza — are treated as collateral damage.
Breaking the Cycle
The Epstein files revealed the rot in America’s elite networks of protection. The Israeli leaks show how that same dynamic extends internationally, with governments and lobbyists complicit in shielding predators.
When children are unprotected because politicians are bought and paid for, democracy itself has failed. The fight to end this cycle is not just about Israel, not just about AIPAC — it’s about whether justice, accountability, and human rights can survive in the face of money and power.