Testimony has ended in the child labor trial of Sholom Rubashkin.
Rubashkin, former Agriprocessors executive, is on trial for 83 counts of misdemeanor child labor violations, and his trial resumed Tuesday morning in Black Hawk County District Court with his wife, Leah Rubashkin, taking the stand.
Sholom Rubashkin was busy in his job at the Agriprocessors meatpacking plant in Postville and traveled a lot for work, according to his wife.
She recounted a list of business and family trips to California, Florida, New York, South Dakota, Canada and Israel her husband took in 2007 through 2008.
Leah Rubashkin also talked about sneaking in to bring her husband lunch at his office when he was at the Postville plant. She said there were usually three or four people waiting to have meetings with him, and although she could get in, it usually took him 15 to 20 minutes before he could acknowledge her.
Earlier in the trial, former underage workers testifying for the prosecution said they occasionally saw Sholom Rubashkin on the plant floor.
During Tuesday’s testimony, Leah Rubashkin said her husband was sometimes mistaken for his younger brother, Heshy, who also worked at the plant.
Leah Rubashkin told jurors her husband came from a very observant Jewish family and described how her own family started the transition to become more observant when she was around 11 years old.
Asked about her husband’s appearance, Leah Rubashkin said he wears the yarmulke cap to remind him that God is always above him. She said he dons his long black coat daily — an item some Jewish men only wear on the Sabbath — because of his dedication. She said the religion forbids him from shaving off his beard.
She said Sholom Rubashkin finished the process of becoming a Rabbi about the time they were married 28 years ago. He worked in his father’s New York butcher shop after they were wed, and the couple did outreach work in Atlanta, Ga., for about year.
They later moved to Minnesota, and for three years Sholom Rubashkin commuted to Postville when his father bought the meatpacking plant there. They then moved to Postville about 17 years ago, she said.
Another defense witness called Tuesday, Rodney Heston, whose company redesigned the industrial refrigeration system at Agriprocessors, also said Sholom Rubashkin was “extremely busy” at his job.
He said it usually took an appointment and an hour of waiting to see the executive when he went to the plant.
Wayne Hecker, who had worked at Agriprocessors, said there was never a formal chain of command at the plant. He said Sholom Rubashkin was in charge of the business side of the operation, and Rubashkin’s brother oversaw sales and production.
Hecker told jurors about an incident where a son or daughter of a supervisor was fired because he or she wasn’t old enough to work in meatpacking operations.
After a lunch break, the defense indicated it didn’t have any more witnesses, and the state didn’t call any rebuttal witnesses.
Judge Nathan Callahan excused the jury at 1:20 p.m., reminding them to not view or read any news accounts of the trial. He asked them to return Thursday at 10 a.m. for closing arguments.
The court still has to finalize the jury instructions with the prosecution and defense.
Callahan also said he will dismiss some of the charges against Rubashkin. The defense had asked the court to throw out charges that listed as victims minors who didn’t testify.
that Hashem help you to get again your family together. you your husband and children decerve it .
How you stend with your big Emunah
We’re with you all the way! May Hashem send your husband home to you, in TOTAL freedom now! Enough suffering…You have been an amazing example of emuna and chassidishkeit. We love you! LN, Sweden
let him go!!
Let him go home already!
Ad mosai?
May we hear good news!!
Free him now!!!!
I agree 100 percent. He should be back with his family free from all this suffering. Continue davenning and doing mivtzos
How come there is only 10 comments when other articles have around 50!!!Shollom Mordechai Rubashken is a fellow jew in prison please write if you agree with me.
I least thats over with. Lets keep davening and saying tehhilim and giving tzedaka for him so that all the charges will be thrown away with moshiach now!
‘The Forwards’ (Really ‘backwards’) newpaper/rag
caused all this pain, destruction and suffering.
I hope they get sued BIG TIME!
KEEP UP THE DAVENING AND TZDOKE AND NO MESIRAH
Thats it He should be free with everything that he lost to be restored and more!!
just a little point we say 3 times daily in shemone esrei we say “..let there be no hope for informers…” let it really be so!
it wouldn’t be so bad to know what we are davening!
if u didn’t daven b/4 try
we want Moshiach now!!!
The redemption of captives receives priority over sustaining the poor and providing them with clothing. [Indeed,] there is no greater mitzvah than the redemption of captives.30 For a captive is among those who are hungry, thirsty, and unclothed and he is in mortal peril.31 If someone pays no attention to his redemption, he violates the negative commandments: “Do not harden your heart or close your hand” (Deuteronomy 15:7), “Do not stand by when the blood of your neighbor is in danger” (Leviticus 19:16), and “He shall not oppress him with exhausting work in your presence” (ibid. 25:53). And he has… Read more »
The judge mentions he’ll throw out some charges… let it be all of them.
We are in the spiritual trenches, pleading for you and your family! May Hashem help you fully now.
please