Teacher Sentenced In Sodomy
By Alvin E. Bessent
Staff Writer
May 14, 1988
A Long Island man who admitted sodomizing or sexually assaulting 13 boys who came to his Great Neck home for computer courses was sentenced yesterday to up to 30 years in prison.
"Never in my experience have I ever come across a case as wide-ranging and as heinous as that perpetrated by this defendant," said Assistant District Attorney Joseph Onorato, who has prosecuted sex crimes since 1973.
Arnold Friedman, who pleaded guilty March 25 to 42 sex-related charges involving the 13 boys, stood meekly with his hands cuffed behind his back as Nassau County Judge Abbey Boklan sentenced him to the 10to 30-year jail term to which Friedman had agreed when he entered his plea.
The sentence is to run concurrently with a similar federal one that Friedman received earlier for sending child pornography through the mails.
"Since I may not be on the bench in 10 years when you are eligible for parole," Boklan told Friedman, "this court wants the record to show that you are a menace to society and should not be released early."
Friedman said nothing when offered a chance to speak.
Fourteen of the victims' relatives, many of whom have come to court each time Friedman appeared, sat together in three front rows of the courtroom. Most sat impassively, but one woman bowed her head and sobbed quietly after at first glaring in Friedman's direction.
In letters to the court, Boklan noted, some of the victims' parents had asked whether she could order Friedman to pay for their children's therapy. "Since restitution was not a part of the plea bargain I cannot impose it," she said in court.
Friedman, 56, was brought from the Federal Correctional Institution in Otisville, N.Y., for his court appearance. He has been in the prison since March 28, when he was sentenced to 10 years for sending child pornography through the mail. He pleaded guilty to that charge Feb. 8 and was sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge Mark A. Costantino.
Friedman's son, Jesse Friedman, who faces multiple counts of sodomy, sexual abuse, endangering the welfare of a child and using a child in a sexual performance, is awaiting trial. Arnold Friedman's wife, Elaine, has been charged with attempted second-degree assault and second-degree obstructing governmental administration after taking a swing at a police officer Nov. 27 as he gathered evidence from the couple's home. She is free without bail awaiting trial.
Copyright © 2004, Newsday, Inc.
The Secret Life Of Arnold Friedman
Friends and parents knew him as a respected teacher. What they didn't know was that he and his son were sexually abusing pre-teen boys. See end of text for sidebar-Possible Telltale Signs
By ALVIN E. BESSENT
Staff Writer
May 28, 1989Frustrated because no arrests had been made, a group of parents decided to confront the teacher at his home. They met Nov. 24 at an office in Great Neck in preparation for the siege. Police attended the meeting. They headed off the confrontation by convincing the group that arrests were imminent.
The next day, Nov. 25, 1987, 12 Nassau police officers and an assistant district attorney descended on the house and broke in the front door. They took Arnold Friedman into custody.
Mrs. Friedman was out shopping for Thanksgiving dinner. Thirty minutes after police arrived, she got home to find neighbors, reporters and camera crews gathered out front and her husband inside in handcuffs. "It was a horror," said Mrs. Friedman, who frantically tried to stop the police searching her house.
"She pushed me," Galasso said. "She threw a punch at my head."
Arnold Friedman was arrested on a variety of child-abuse charges, and his wife was arrested for attempted assault.
Jesse Friedman was with friends shopping in the East Village that day. He bought a scarf and some records and then at 5 p.m., he called home. Galasso answered. His father and mother had been arrested, she said. She advised him to come home.
Telling his friends nothing of what was going on, he went to Pennsylvania Station, stumbled onto a Long Island Rail Road train and began the long ride home to arrest and jail.
It was a journey that had begun in his childhood.
* * *
According to the judge who would sentence him to prison for child abuse, Jesse Friedman was "raised an unwanted child in a home devoid of love."
His mother, in tears as the judge spoke, didn't challenge that assessment.
"When I was married and had babies, I couldn't love those babies," she said in an interview. "I asked Jesse, do you remember me hugging you at all? He said no. He was so starved for love, for approval, for acceptance that he would have done anything for this love.
"He came into the family sort of out of step. The family focus was on the two older boys," said the mother, who declined to discuss her older sons, neither of whom was involved in the sex abuse case. "He was always kind of . . . dragged along and felt excluded."
Jesse Friedman was interviewed in March in a prison visiting room. As he slouched on a plastic chair and sipped a cherry cola, Jesse said he is "halfway between loving and hating" the man he holds responsible for landing him in prison. "He let me down as a father."
When he was 8 or 9 years old, Jesse said, he stumbled upon his father's cache of kiddie porn. Later, his father began to visit his bedroom at night and fondle him. The abuse escalated into sodomy.
"In my family, everything got washed under the rug," Jesse said. "I never told about the abuse. I didn't think anyone would understand. Trying to do something about the problems in my family never seemed to get me anywhere." Jesse said his parents fought a great deal. "I used to go to sleep listening to them fighting, screaming at one another . . . I never saw them loving each other. I would cry when they would fight. I would bang on the walls. I've got all these holes in the walls from my banging." Jesse said his parents argued about him and about such mundane issues as the color of a carpet.
When he was 10, Jesse began psychiatric therapy. He insists he never told his therapist about the incest.
Jesse increasingly had trouble in school. By ninth grade he rarely attended classes and failed every subject. His academic record improved when he enrolled in an alternative school in Great Neck.
But his emotional problems continued. At 15, Jesse said, he was diagnosed as manic depressive. "I had no friends and no interests except M&Ms, marshmallows and TV." He was 5 feet, 6 inches tall and he ballooned to 175 pounds. At 16 he began smoking marijuana and using LSD, and before long he was stoned on a daily basis.
Jesse gave up drugs a year later after meeting his first girlfriend. "I enjoyed friends and women more than smoking pot," he said.
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Galasso also strongly rejected the idea that interviews with the children were designed to coax preconceived answers. The first detective sent out to interview one 10-year-old boy was surprised when the boy -- upon meeting the detective -- immediately handed him a flier that advertised Elaine Friedman's in-home day-care center.

The next day,
Nov. 25, 1987, 12 Nassau
police officers and an assistant
district attorney descended on the house and broke in the front door.
They took Arnold Friedman into custody.
Mrs. Friedman was out shopping for Thanksgiving dinner. Thirty minutes after
police arrived, she got home to find neighbors, reporters and camera crews
gathered out front and her husband inside in handcuffs. "It was a horror," said
Mrs. Friedman, who frantically tried to stop the police searching her house.
"She pushed me," Galasso said. "She threw a punch at my head."
Arnold Friedman was arrested on a
variety of child-abuse charges, and his wife was arrested
for attempted assault.
Jesse Friedman was with friends shopping
in the East Village that day. He bought a scarf and some records and then at 5
p.m., he called home. Galasso answered. His father and
mother had been arrested, she said. She advised him to come home.
Telling his friends nothing of what was going on, he went to Pennsylvania
Station, stumbled onto a Long Island Rail Road train and began the long ride
home to arrest and jail.
Danamora Correctional
Prisoners have their own lawn and patio areas
Despite the attorney's plea for leniency, Boklan again recommended that the
defendant serve the full sentence.
Jesse is in the Clinton Correctional
Facility in Dannemora.
Because Clinton is built on the side of a mountain, the hillside accounted for
unique
skiing activity in winter.
It also
accounts for another unique Clinton tradition.
Small areas of the hillside are used as "courts,"
which groups of inmates call their own
and where they gather to socialize, cook and eat, play cards, chess and
checkers, and grow flower and vegetable gardens.
The 300 established courts range in size
from nine square feet to 25-by-50 feet and accommodate up to six men.
The hillside crowded with courts has often been likened to a hobo jungle. The
courts had their origins "in the rights of a few squatters," but their use has
for years been sanctioned by facility officials. The court system is seen as
playing a key role in the social structure of Clinton’s 2,900 inmates and the
manage ment of this large population.
Along with the creative programming based in the Annex, Clinton offers the
core programs of modern
corrections in New York state: academic education, vocational training, alcohol
and substance abuse treatment and work assignments in areas such as facility
maintenance, grounds keeping, food service, and industries.
Some
450 inmates
assigned to Clinton's Corcraft industrial program manufacture inmate clothing
for DOCS and the New York City Department of Corrections, and Class B uniforms
for DOCS Correction Officers. The Garment Shop also produces clothing for
residents of the facilities operated by the Office of Mental Health and the
Division for Youth. In 1989, Clinton was the 19th New York state correctional
facility to be accredited by the ACA and will soon undergo its fourth
reaccreditation audit.
Ski jumping, bobsledding, and ice
skating are practiced by some inmates.
The bobsled run
courses down a wide avenue between courts near the west wall. In summer the
avenue is not appropriated for court use; it has the appearance of a fire-break
running straight up the hill.
Body builders. Four platform type spaces, equipped with weight-lifting articles,
occupy a space close to the entrance to the yard. Football players.
Organized (tackle) football is a big thing at Clinton. An inmate player reported
that there are four teams, each numbering about 30 men. Basketball players. The
number of basketball (and handball) players is about the same as the football
contingency. Horseshoe players.
A relatively small group. Television
watchers. Several inmates occupy an area near the building where they watch two
hooded television sets. Unlike many prisons, Clinton has little access to
television. A two-channel radio station is piped into the cellblocks and
available to inmates by individual earphones.
One channel, I was told, carried sports programs; the other often carried the
soundtrack of a television program on the air at that time.
For the Court’s convenience, this chronology sets forth many of the most important events in this case.
July 1984 U.S. Customs agents at JFK Airport seize a child pornography magazine addressed to Arnold Friedman. They inform United States Postal Inspector John McDermott
November 23, 1984 -
February 6, 1986 For a year and a half, an undercover postal inspector, posing as a collector of child pornography, engages in a correspondence with Arnold Friedman, trying to persuade Friedman to send a piece of child pornography by mail.
February 8, 1986 Arnold Friedman sends the undercover postal inspector a magazine that contains child pornography.
November 3, 1987 After continued correspondence with the postal inspector, over another year and a half, in which Arnold Friedman repeatedly requests the return of the magazine, Postal Inspector John McDermott, posing as a mailman, returns the magazine to Arnold Friedman at his home in Great Neck in a “controlled delivery.”
McDermott and other federal agents execute a search of the Friedman home, pursuant to a warrant, for “materials related to the manufacturing and distributing of child pornography.” They find approximately twenty magazines, alleged to contain child pornography, in Arnold Friedman’s private office, but no evidence of self-produced pornography. They also find a list of names of students who had attended Arnold Friedman’s after-school computer classes over the prior several years.
November 4, 1987 Informed of the search by federal agents, Detective Sergeant Fran Galasso of the Nassau County Police Department initiates an investigation into possible child sexual abuse in Arnold Friedman’s computer classes. There have been no complaints of abuse from children and no parent has reported physical or psychological symptoms of abuse. Two-detective teams begin interviewing students on the list
November 25, 1987 Nassau County detectives execute a search of the Friedman house and arrest Arnold and Jesse Friedman on charges of child sexual abuse.
December 9, 1987 Arnold and Jesse Friedman are arraigned on Indictment 67104, which contains fifty-two counts of child sexual abuse against five children.
February 8, 1988 Arnold Friedman pleads guilty in federal court to one count of mailing child pornography.
February 9, 1988 Arnold and Jesse Friedman are arraigned on Indictment 67430, which contains ninety-one counts of sexual abuse against eight children. The arraignment is covered in court by television cameras and photographers. This is the first time a judge has ever permitted cameras inside a Nassau County courtroom. Judge Boklan will continue to routinely grant such requests throughout the proceedings.
March 25, 1988 Arnold Friedman pleads guilty before Judge Boklan to all felony counts in Indictments 67104 and 67430 in exchange for a promised sentence of ten to thirty years, to run concurrently with any sentence imposed in federal court. Faced with the prospect of being re-arrested and prosecuted based on the allegations of other children, he provides a lengthy “closeout” statement to detectives, confessing to acts of molestation against every child whose name is raised by the police. Detectives will use this statement in subsequent visits to children’s houses.
March 28, 1988 Arnold Friedman is sentenced to ten years in federal prison.
April 11,1988 Douglas Krieger, Esq., serves a demand for discovery, which includes a specific Brady request.
May 13, 1988 Arnold Friedman is sentenced to ten to thirty years in prison on the state charges.
June 22, 1988 Ross Goldstein is arrested based on a felony complaint alleging 18 counts of child sexual abuse committed in the Friedmans’ computer classes. Detective Galasso tells the press and Jesse’s attorney, Peter Panaro, that there might be as many as four additional suspects arrested.
June 23, 1988 Jesse Friedman, who has surrendered at the demand of Nassau County police, is arraigned on a felony complaint charging thirty-seven new counts of sexual abuse.
September 8, 1988 Ross Goldstein signs a plea agreement in which he promises to testify against Jesse Friedman. Goldstein is promised a sentence of six months in the county jail, five years probation, and a youthful offender adjudication.
In or about Summer/
Fall 1988 Attorney Panaro, having viewed and transcribed the tape of the Interview of Gary Meyers, specifically requests Brady evidence of similar suggestive and intimidating questioning of other children by detectives. None is disclosed.
November 15, 1988 Jesse Friedman and Ross Goldstein are arraigned on Indictment 69783, which contains 302 counts of child sexual abuse against seven children.
December 20, 1988 Jesse Friedman pleads guilty before Judge Boklan to twenty-four counts in full satisfaction of the three indictments against him in exchange for a promised sentence of six to eighteen years.
January 24, 1989 Jesse Friedman is sentenced by Judge Boklan to six to eighteen years.
March 22, 1989 Ross Goldstein pleads guilty to three counts of sodomy in the first degree, and one count of use of a child in a sexual performance.
May 3, 1989 Ross Goldstein is sentenced to two to six years by Judge Boklan, contrary to Goldstein’s cooperation agreement. Thirteen months later, the Second Department reverses Judge Boklan and orders that she re-sentences Goldstein to the originally promised term of six months.
Fall 2000 Andrew Jarecki begins production of a documentary about children’s birthday party entertainers, which eventually becomes “Capturing the Friedmans.” He first contacts Jesse Friedman about the project in March 2001.
December 7, 2001 Jesse Friedman is released from prison after serving thirteen years of his sentence.
January 2002 Jesse Friedman sits for on-camera interview with Andrew Jarecki for his film.
January 2003 Jesse Friedman sees a rough-cut of “Capturing the Friedmans”.
January 2004 Fulfilling 16 years of hope, Jesse Friedman files an appeal of his conviction in Nassau County.
Dragnet Is Out For Porn Photos In Child Sex Case
Newsday February 8, 1989
By Alvin E. Bessent
Police are searching for pornographic photos and videotapes that could be key evidence in their continuing investigation of a Great Neck child sex‑abuse case.
Many victims told police they were photographed performing sexual acts in the home of computer teacher Arnold Friedman, who has pleaded guilty to sex abuse. And many parents, who fear the material is circulating in child pornography circles, say they were angered because plea bargain negotiations by authorities with Friedman's son Jesse, 18, did not lead police to the material.
A teenage neighbor of the Friedman's has been indicted in the investigation, but two other men that the victims and he said were also involved haven't been charged. The missing pornographic materials could provide needed evidence against the two suspects, officials said.
"Virtually every child who gave a statement said they were extensively photographed and videotaped during these sexual acts," said Det. Sgt. Frances Galasso, chief of the Nassau police sex crimes unit. "Just about every class was videotaped. It had to be dozens [of tapes]," she said.
Jesse Friedman's defense attorney, Peter Panaro, said a video camera and a 35mm still camera were regularly positioned on tripods in the ground floor classroom where Arnold Friedman conducted computer classes. But Panaro maintained that his client doesn't know what became of the photos and tapes, or whether they still exist. "Jesse says he's never seen a picture ever," Panaro said. "Arnold had 100 percent control over pictures." Arnold Friedman's attorney, Jerry Bernstein, declined to comment.
None of the pictures or tapes were found during two searches in late 1987 of the Friedman house at 17 Picadilly Road. Nassau police have traveled around the region to view child pornography seized in other jurisdictions, Galasso said. And federal postal inspectors said they, too, are on the lookout for homemade pornography tied to those involved in the case. Authorities said they have no firm leads to the whereabouts of the materials.
Parents of many of the victims say they fear that the materials featuring their children will be distributed in the child pornography netherworld. That was one of the threats Arnold Friedman used to keep the children quiet about what was going on during his classes, parents and police have said.
Because of those concerns, and the parents' desire that the two additional suspects described by victims be charged in the case, questions about the missing photos and tapes almost derailed the negotiations that resulted in Jesse Friedman's Dec. 20 guilty plea to 25 counts of sexual abuse in the case.
According to parents of the victims, Jesse Friedman often had a camera around his neck when he greeted their children outside his home before computer classes. When he entered his guilty plea, he admitted taking photos, of at least one boy in a sexual scene. In an interview, one victim said he was afraid the pictures and tapes could ruin lives, but took solace in the hope that the pornography will not surface for years. "People change so much as they grow older . . . If these things surface 20 years later, they won't be recognizable," he said.
The mother of a victim said, “The kids are afraid Jesse has those pictures and when he comes out of jail he's going to be real angry and use those pictures to hurt them. It's a very powerful hold to have on someone, to have those pictures.”
The Friedmans were arrested Nov. 26 1987, and charged with counts of child sexual abuse. Charges were later filed against a third defendant, Ross [ ], bringing the total number of counts to 465. [I have deleted the surname of the state's witness because he received a youthful adjudication and has a sealed criminal record.]
Questions about the tapes and photos were not raised during negotiations with Arnold Friedman that resulted in his guilty plea to 42 felony child sexual abuse charges in exchange for a 10 to 30 year prison sentence. The children had not told police about being photographed or the presence of additional adults during the classes before March 25 when Arnold Friedman's plea was accepted, officials said. Arnold Friedman is serving his state sentence concurrently with 10 to 30 years imposed on the federal charge of distributing pornography through the mail.
[Ross], who was indicted last November on 118 counts of sexual abuse, confirmed in grand jury testimony that, in addition to the Friedmans, two additional men participated in the abuse of the victims. But that account from a co‑defendant such as [Ross] must be independently corroborated to be of use during a trial, said Assistant District Attorney Joseph Onorato. [Ross] has pleaded not guilty to the charges and is free on $25,000 bail. [Ross'] attorney Michael Cornacchia declined comment
Based on [Ross'] testimony, police said, two suspects were brought in for lineups. But only one of the twelve victims who have been cooperating with the investigation made a positive identification. Two others said they thought they recognized one of the men, but weren't sure, Onorato said.
That left police with the missing photos and tapes as their best remaining hope for making cases against the two suspects, Galasso said.
Outraged relatives of seven of the victims wanted a 10‑to‑30 year sentence for Jesse Friedman unless he led police to the pornography. They said Onorato badgered them during Dec. 16 and Dec. 20 meetings in his Mineola office when he advised them to accept a deal for 6‑to‑18 years.
Onorato denied pressuring the parents. Before accepting the plea, Onorato said, he pushed Jesse Friedman for leads to the photos and tapes. But the defendant maintained he knew nothing about the pornography.
Panaro confirmed that Onorato pressured Jesse Friedman on the subject of the photos and tapes before agreeing to the deal. "They wanted those pictures," Panaro said. "I thought the whole deal was dead."
Police asked anyone with information about the case to call the sex‑crimes unit at 535‑7816. All calls will be kept confidential, they said.
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The Secret Life Of Arnold Friedman Friends and parents knew him as a respected teacher. What they didn't know was that he and his son were sexually abusing pre-teen boys. See end of text for sidebar-Possible Telltale Signs By ALVIN E. BESSENT
IN THE SPRING of 1986, about 100 people - most of them former students of
the guest of honor - crowded a hot, second-floor television studio at
Bayside High School in Queens to honor a science teacher named Arnold
Friedman.
The ex-students, who had come from places as far away as California, greeted each other over sodas and sandwiches and talked about a man some described as unforgettable and others called the best teacher they'd ever had. One guest credited Friedman with turning his life around. The occasion was Arnold Friedman's retirement after a 26-year career at Bayside High. Friedman, who had the respect of his peers as well as his students, had taught one of New York City's first high school classes in nuclear physics and the first organic chemistry class ever offered at Bayside. And he and his students had converted classroom 235 into WBAY-TV, a simulated television station where they produced videotapes. In a speech to the group, Lester Speiser, principal of the school during most of Friedman's tenure, talked about the joy that Friedman got from "communicating and teaching and seeing his students succeed." Afterwards, Friedman's youngest son, Jesse, pumped Speiser's hand. "It was wonderful, the things you said about my father," Speiser remembers Jesse telling him. "In my whole career I don't remember students ever throwing a party like this for someone," Speiser says. * * * On the day of Arnold Friedman's retirement party, postal inspectors in New York City were in the middle of an investigation that would shatter the teacher's reputation, tear apart his family and horrify his suburban community. The investigation had been going on for two years. In July, 1984, U. S. Customs officials at Kennedy airport had plucked a small parcel from the stream of boxes and envelopes culled daily for contraband. They had learned to be suspicious of small parcels in plain brown wrappers like the one sent from Holland to Arnold Friedman, 17 Picadilly Rd., Great Neck, Long Island. Inside was a magazine called Boy Love. It featured low-budget color photos of nude boys and graphic pictures of men having sex with children. Postal authorities were alerted and the investigation was launched. Using an undercover name and address, a postal inspector wrote to Arnold Friedman and asked if he had "boy lover" material to sell. "I have none to sell but am interested in obtaining," Friedman responded three days later. "Do you know of any sources?" The inspector, who called himself Stan, wrote back but heard nothing from Friedman for more than a year. Then, the day after Christmas, 1985, Friedman renewed the correspondence. "I have a great photo book from Holland that might be copyable. Could you do it?" Other letters followed; the correspondents became "Stan" and "Arnie." "The book is `Joe and his Uncle,' " Arnie wrote. "I think I'd like you to send me something (sort of good faith) and I will forward this rather precious book to you." Stan sent two photos and on Feb. 8, 1986, Arnie mailed a large envelope with a handwritten note. "Stan - Enjoy! Arnie." Inside was the magazine "Joe and His Uncle" - kiddie-porn from a company in Denmark. It was the breakthrough the postal inspectors had been waiting for. The correspondence built up; Arnie even filled out a questionnaire from Stan for an ostensible porn pen-pal club. On Nov. 3, 1987, an inspector dressed as a postman returned "Joe and his Uncle" to the house on Picadilly Road where Arnold Friedman gave computer lessons to children. Fifteen minutes later, government officials and Nassau police, armed with a warrant, raided the home. They found a foot-high stack of child pornography secreted behind a piano in the living room. And there were grimmer discoveries - child-sized dildoes in a cabinet just outside a makeshift classroom. They also found a list of 80 names and phone numbers handwritten in Friedman's tortured, tiny scrawl. Police realized that they had found something that went far beyond pornographic magazines. They intensified the investigation. Before it was over, the probe would uncover the largest child sex-abuse case ever on Long Island and one of the largest in New York State - both in the number of victims and the number of charges. The investigation would leave the lives of the children and their families in shambles, and underline the difficulty of gathering evidence in cases involving pedophiles - adults who are sexually attracted to children. And it would leave friends, relatives and colleagues of award-winning teacher Arnold Friedman wondering how such a seemingly nice man could do such horrible things. How it could have happened without anyone knowing it was going on? "I ask myself, looking back, if there were any clues I could have picked up on and the answer is no," said Robert Sholiton, director of The Adult Program for the Great Neck public schools, where Arnold Friedman taught computer classes from 1981 to 1987. "I keep asking myself, is this the man I knew?" Along the way, the investigation into what went on in the house on Picadilly Road would lay bare a lifetime of unspeakable secrets, and lead to Friedman and his 19-year-old son, Jesse, being indicted on hundreds of counts of sex abuse and sentenced to jail terms. THEY WERE secrets that would make the brick-and-shingle high-ranch on a proverbial tree-lined, suburban street in upscale Great Neck a chamber of horrors for dozens of children.
140 Kids Police said that 140
children - ranging in age from 7 to 12 - would finally admit what
they had been too shamed and afraid to tell their parents. Some of them
still wet their beds, take baseball bats to bed with them or are unable to
sleep. "If you murder someone, seconds later they're dead," says the
father of one of the young victims. "This was like a prolonged torture
they subjected the kids to." They were secrets of incest that Arnold
Friedman's now 19-year-old son Jesse kept hidden through years of therapy
and drug abuse. "I guess it mostly started out with my father trying to
love me." Jesse says.
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By Alvin E. Bessent
Staff Writer
Originally published May 14, 1988
Friedman's son, Jesse Friedman, who faces multiple counts of sodomy, sexual
abuse, endangering the welfare of a child and using a child in a sexual
performance, is awaiting trial. Arnold Friedman's wife,
Elaine, has been charged with
attempted second-degree assault and second-degree obstructing governmental
administration after taking a swing at a police officer Nov. 27 as he gathered
evidence from the couple's home. She is free without bail awaiting trial.
Copyright © 2003, Newsday, Inc
|
By Desson Howe
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, June 13, 2003; Page WE33
IF YOU and your family found yourselves in hell, would you pull out the camcorder and film your misery? Would you goof around for the camera in the face of doom and disaster? The Friedmans did, even though Arnold Friedman, the father, and Jesse, the youngest of his three sons, were facing jail sentences for multiple counts of child molestation.
Why they did this is just one of several striking mysteries in "Capturing the Friedmans," a jarring, mesmerizing documentary that chronicles the emotional and moral disintegration of a seemingly respectable middle-class family from Great Neck, N.Y.
Their trauma began the day before Thanksgiving 1987 with Arnold and Jesse's arrest for the sexual molestation of young boys. Arnold Friedman, an award-winning music and computer teacher, and also an admitted pedophile, had been caught weeks earlier in a sting operation after ordering and distributing child pornography through the mail.
Upon learning that an admitted pedophile had tutored hundreds of preteens in the privacy of his home, the Nassau County police conducted interviews with alleged victims and their parents. In very short order, they obtained often lurid complaints accusing the middle-aged Arnold and the 18-year-old Jesse (who was his father's classroom assistant) of activities ranging from showing pornographic computer games to brutal, even gleeful acts of sodomy.
During the years of Arnold's computer classes, not one student had come forward or even mentioned anything to his parents at the time. And no physical evidence of sexual molestation (not a requirement under New York State law) was requested by Nassau County police. According to the police, however, the boys claimed to have been threatened with violence if they told their parents. Arnold and Jesse were arrested, indicted and found guilty.
Within two years of their arrest, both men were jailed. Arnold died in prison in 1995. Jesse, convicted separately of sexual molestation, spent 13 years in jail. A family and a community were devastated, and the book of justice was closed in Nassau County. Or was it? Writer-director Andrew Jarecki's film, three years in the making, covers the arrest, hysteria and guilty pleas of the late 1980s. He conducts present-day interviews with many of the significant players, including the Friedmans, family friends and associates, purported sexual victims and a long line of Nassau County law enforcement and justice figures. He also records such recent events as Jesse's release from prison in 2001 and reunion with his estranged mother.
But most significantly, there are staggering excerpts from some 50 hours of Friedman home movies, which the family permitted Jarecki to use. Those private films include scenes dating back to Arnold's childhood, footage shot years before the arrest and in the months immediately after, and personal videos made by Arnold's eldest son, David, which were his attempts to deal with the unfolding saga.
These family films are the documentary's most explosive sections. Arnold and his three sons, David, Seth (who declined to be interviewed for the movie) and Jesse, had a longstanding tradition of making hammy films about themselves that were full of corny jokes and commentary. Their involuntary target of humor in happier times was wife and mother Elaine, hardly the most spontaneous resident of Great Neck, who did not share their sense of frivolity nor feel part of their camaraderie. When the sexual charges hit the household, Elaine's separation from her husband and sons became more pronounced. Although the sons rallied around the father, she refused to join the cause. She simply did not believe Arnold was innocent and told them so. You can see this surreal dynamic in the home footage that David shot during the family's darkest moments.
In another moment of home movie Friedmania, David turns the camera on himself and begins a diary-like soliloquy about the innocence of his father. This film, he says, is "between me and me now, and me in the future." It is private, he insists, and anyone watching it should "turn it off." He also directs an unequivocal insult to any police investigators who might be watching. What is the result? An incredibly provocative, fascinating film that is about the way one eccentric family faced an intolerable crisis and the confounding wheels of justice.
In terms of the two cases, Jarecki avoids overt declarations about his beliefs, but it's easy to imagine he believes Jesse Friedman, if not also Arnold, to be innocent. He gives everyone some screen time, including Sgt. Frances Galasso, who led the police effort to arrest and indict the Friedmans. She stressed how careful she was in preparing the case because "charging someone with this kind of a crime is enough to ruin their lives."
He also makes it clear Arnold was no innocent. There are some staggering revelations about his pedophilia (including his possible molestation of his own brother, Howard, and Jesse -- which both men say they don't recall) that make it hard to feel much sympathy for him. This makes Elaine's justification for disbelieving and leaving a man who had already kept dark secrets completely understandable.
But there are declarations like these, which don't reflect well on Nassau County:
"There was never a doubt in my mind as to their guilt," declares Abbey Boklan, the judge in both cases.
"Children want to please very often," says Detective Lloyd Doppman, who was part of the police team that conducted the interviews of the student children. "They want to give you the answers that you want."
We hear from one student who says he was sexually abused, but we also hear from another who says he was not -- nor can he imagine the "nebbish" Arnold being the "brutal sadist" characterized by complaints. And we hear from a close friend of Jesse who spent much of his time at the Friedmans' house, and also claims to have witnessed nothing.
Arnold's apparent accomplice was the soft-spoken Jesse. Was he really the "molesting tyrant" some accused him of being? Could a community, in the sanctimonious heyday of the "family values" era, have irresponsibly destroyed a family? These are some of the many questions Jarecki wants you to mull over. They are compelling questions indeed, giving you the sense that "Capturing the Friedmans" is a Chinese-box conundrum.
Were these convictions a modern-day case of Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery," the short story in which a group of citizens gather amiably for the ritual of stoning someone, or was justice served to two sleazy child molesters? It's testament to Jarecki's superbly wrought film that everyone seems to be, simultaneously, morally suspect and strikingly innocent as they relate their stories and assertions. Each one of them -- whether sex unit detectives, former computer students or members of the Friedman family -- seems confident they're telling the truth, despite contradicting other people's testimony. This is a film about the quagmire of mystery in every human soul.
CAPTURING THE FRIEDMANS (Unrated, 107 minutes) -- Contains graphic descriptions of child pornography and other sexual themes and obscenity. At the Cineplex Odeon Dupont Circle and Landmark's Bethesda Row.
http://www.bostonphoenix.com/boston/news_features/other_stories/multipage/documents/03006984.htm http://freejesse.net/ http://www.judgegalasso.com/
FRANCES M GALASSO
EAST NORWICH NY age = 57 JOHN M GALASSO EAST NORWICH NY 58 http://www4.law.com/ny/judges_profiles/county_court/nassau/bios_index.shtmlName is John M Galasso
http://www.capturingthefriedmans.com/main.html http://www.baltimoresun.com/features/ny-friedmangallery,0,5040748.storygallery?coll=bal-features-headlines http://www.bostonphoenix.com/boston/news_features/other_stories/multipage/documents/03006983.htmhttp://www.bostonphoenix.com/boston/news_features/other_stories/documents/03006986.htm
http://www.magpictures.com/distribution/data/press/capturingthefriedmans_production_notes
http://www.newsday.com/news/local/longisland/ny-friedman062488,0,341657.story?coll=ny-linews-utility
http://www.newsday.com/news/local/longisland/ny-lifman293355703jul02,0,1486672.story?coll=ny-linews-utility
http://www.baltimoresun.com/features/ny-friedman052889,0,2607517.story?coll=bal-features-headlines
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California, meanwhile, saw the equally infamous McMartin Preschool case, in which children claimed to have endured sadistic, ritual sexual abuse. Although no one was ever convicted, the case took more than six years to wend its way through the courts and cost the state of California more than $10 million. In New Jersey, Kelly Michaels, a 23-year-old day-care teacher at the Wee Care Nursery School, stood trial for, among other things, making children lick peanut butter off her genitals. She was found guilty of 115 counts of child abuse and sentenced in 1988 to 47 years in prison. In 1993, however, she successfully appealed her prosecution and was released from prison. And Washington state saw the notorious Wenatchee cases, in which prosecutors went after alleged child "sex rings" run, in part, from a local Pentecostal church.
| Party Clowns Packing Pistols? |
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| I think one of the strange comments in the film that shows the hysteria was the woman detective saying all eyes were on David when he pulled out the underwear to cover his face from the cameras because they assumed he was pulling out a gun. Why would they assume David visiting his family for Thanksgiving would be prepare for a shoot-out with the police? | |
The Friedman's apparent normalcy comes to an end when postal inspector John McDermott intercepts an envelope from the Netherlands containing child pornography. The envelope is addressed to Arnold. Two search warrants and a broken-down door later, Arnold and the youngest son Jesse, now eighteen, are taken away in handcuffs while eldest son David throws a fit as he walks around wearing underwear on his head to avoid being filmed by television cameras. The charges are, in addition to possession of a large stash of pornography depicting men with underage boys, ninety-one counts of orally and anally sodomizing boys from the computer class. Jesse, who assisted Arnold, was linked by the students in police interviews, some of whom are interviewed again by director Andrew Jarecki for the movie. One even describes naked leapfrog games in the classroom that involved acts of sodomy.
The events that occurred on the night of his arrest, thoroughly covered by the media at the time, were sad, grotesque, and darkly humorous. They included David putting underwear over his head and berating the local TV cameras. But things got worse. Not only did the police haul away Friedman; they also arrested the youngest son, Jesse, as an accomplish.
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