The death penalty is legal in Israel only under certain circumstances but has been used only once before


Despite calls from several Israeli ministers to impose the death penalty on the terrorist who fatally stabbed three members of an Israeli family in the Halamish settlement, the Israel Defense Forces’ Military Advocate General Brig. Gen.  Sharon Afek  has ruled against the request.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu himself expressed support for applying the death penalty in the case of the attacker, 19-year-old Omar al-Abed,  just days earlier.

It's time we start giving death sentences to terrorists," the Israeli premier told the mourning family, according to Ynet News.

Al-Abed, from the nearby village of Kaubar, broke into the family's home during a Shabbat dinner and brutally stabbed a grandfather and his two adult children to death --Yosef Salomon, 70, Chaya Salomon, 46, and Elad Salomon, 36 -- while the young grandchildren were hidden in a room by their mother, Elad's wife.

Tova Salomon, 68, the wife and mother of the deceased, was seriously injured but survived.

"It's enshrined in law, it requires a unanimous decision by the judges, but they also want to know the government's position. And my position as the prime minister, in this instance of such a heinous murderer—he needs to be executed,” stated Netanyahu latst week. “We need to wipe the smile off his face.

"Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman, Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked, and Education Minister Naftali Bennett all called on the military courts to demand the death penalty as well.


“In such an extreme case, there is indeed room to impose the death penalty and that is within the jurisdiction of the Judea and Samaria military courts,” Lieberman told Israel’s Ynet News last month.