Crime & Safety

Judge Rules on Rabbi's Peeping Sentence

Rabbi and former Towson professor Barry Freundel challenged his six-and-half-year sentence for 52 counts of voyeurism.

A judge has reportedly upheld the six-and-a-half-year sentence for the rabbi who recorded dozens of women undressing in a ritual Jewish bath in Georgetown.

Rabbi Barry Freundel pleaded guilty to 52 counts of voyeurism and was sentenced in May to 45 days for each count.

Afterward, he filed an appeal, arguing he should be sentenced for one offense.

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Related: Former Towson Professor Challenges Sentence for Voyeurism

According to WUSA9, the judge who upheld the sentence at a hearing Friday said that each victim should be acknowledged as an individual person.

Find out what's happening in Towsonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Additionally, the judge said the facts of the case did not merit leniency, Washington Jewish Week reported.

Freundel admitted he planted recording devices in the changing room of the sacred ritual bath, or mikvah, in the National Capital Mikvah between 2012 and 2014, according to the U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia.

Those he recorded reportedly included students he taught as a professor at Georgetown and Towson universities. He also led Kesher Israel synagogue in Georgetown.

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Freundel will continue serving his sentence at a federal facility. A judge granted his request to be transferred from a District of Columbia jail to a facility with religious rehabilitative programs.

Screenshot from PJC Media/YouTube video of Barry Freundel delivering a speech to a congregation in 2012.

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