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BARNARD DIRECTOR OF SAFETY & SECURITY FEATURED IN THE ZADDIK, A NEW BOOK ABOUT NEW YORK KIDNAPPING CASE

New York, NY, December 7, 2001—Nine years ago, Detective Captain William Plackenmeyer became embroiled in a sensational kidnapping case that spanned three countries and several years. Now the director of Safety & Security at Barnard College, Plackenmeyer is featured in a new book about this unusual crime.

"It is a real thrill to have your work recognized by being made one of the central figures in a non-fiction novel," Plackenmeyer said.

In 1992, 13-year-old Shai Fhima was taken from his family, but this was not a typical kidnapping case. Fhima was stolen by his yeshiva teacher, Rabbi Shlomo Helbrans, and was hidden for years by the rabbi’s zealous followers. Helbrans brainwashed the boy and attempted to foster a special religious "light" he believed Fhima had.

As the supervisor in charge of the investigation, it was Plackenmeyer’s job to loose Fhima from the bonds of the radical Hasids who held him. With "bulldog tenacity," Plackenmeyer tracked down hundreds of leads and tried to break the barrier of silence enclosing Brooklyn’s close-knit Hasidic community.

"It was extremely frustrating, but ultimately very rewarding," Plackenmeyer said. "The frustration stemmed from having to overcome all of the obstacles to justice placed in our path by the Brooklyn District Attorney's Office for political reasons - in order to avoid alienating the politically powerful Hasidic community. The rewarding feelings came from forcing Shai's return, convicting the rabbi of kidnapping… and most of all from being able to publicly expose the often politically compromised and consequently unfair system of justice at work in Brooklyn to the cleansing gaze of media and public scrutiny."

As the case developed, Plackenmeyer and his colleagues uncovered a series of kidnappings by Helbrans in Israel and America, all in the name of religion. But always "fighting the good fight," Plackenmeyer persevered to return the boy to his family.

This unusual true story filled with headline-making events unfolds in Elaine Grudin Denholtz’ book, The Zaddik: The Battle for a Boy’s Soul, published by Prometheus Books in September 2001.

Contact: Laura Whitlock, Office of Public Affairs, lw251@barnard.edu

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