A judge in Hadera severely criticized the police following the arrest of protesters outside Netanyahu's house in Caesarea. The difference between him and others is that he is before retirement and is not running out of money.

The problem is with the young judges whose promotion depends on Ben Gvir and Levin. Quietly, under the cover of the war, the destruction of the justice system continues, writes Yossi Ben-Gvir. The current minister is the offender then, he writes, as he has filed civil lawsuits against the police and won tens of thousands of shekels for unjustified arrests. The police were blown away by Judge Kaplan's text and, in an unprecedented manner, released a press release: "The honorable court exceeded its authority and its blunt statements condemning the police and its officers." The police have not commented on the judge's comments. They have someone to learn from - precisely from the same person to whom today the policemen raise their eyes - the Minister of National Security, Itamar Ben G Vir. Judge Kaplan has been serving at the Magistrate's Court in Hadera for 22 years, and his age is 67. Kaplan knows that he will no longer be promoted to the district court with such a short horizon, and therefore, in simple and unwashed words, he is no longer paying anyone. He can write what he thinks, without considering whether it is good for him or bad for him for promotion. The reason is that the chairman of the committee for the selection of judges, Minister of Justice Levin, is not ready to promote the judge Joya Scape-Shapira. In general, Shapira's hand is not easy on the trigger for arrests, and in the past, she quickly released arrested extremist right-wing people as well, as well as convicting the MGB fighter, Orian Bar Khalifa, who used unjustified violence against a resident of the eastern part of the city. In the committee, Strock, Kreuzer, and Levin did not make any claim about Shapira, but only about her rulings that do not agree with the will of their base.