{"id":193558,"date":"2026-06-16T17:26:07","date_gmt":"2026-06-17T01:26:07","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?p=193558"},"modified":"2026-06-16T19:58:09","modified_gmt":"2026-06-17T03:58:09","slug":"ny-post-prominent-nj-rabbi-allegedly-sent-graphic-pic-according-to-explosive-sex-assault-suit-not-great-but-works","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?p=193558","title":{"rendered":"NY Post: &#8216;Prominent NJ rabbi allegedly sent graphic pic, according to explosive sex-assault suit: \u2018Not great. But works\u2019&#8217;"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><A HREF=\"https:\/\/nypost.com\/2026\/06\/16\/us-news\/nj-rabbi-allegedly-sent-graphic-pic-according-to-explosive-sex-assault-suit-not-great-but-works\/\">The New York Post says<\/a>:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>\nA prominent New Jersey rabbi sexually assaulted a single mom \u2014 and even sent her a pic of his genitals, admitting, \u201cNot great. But works\u201d \u2014 before launching a cyber-smear campaign against her, court papers allege.<\/p>\n<p>Married Rabbi Avraham Appel \u2014 who runs an elite rabbinical seminary in the tight-knit Lakewood Orthodox community \u2014 used \u201chis position as a rabbi, mentor, and trusted community leader to sexually assault and exploit\u201d mom-of-two Israeli immigrant Miryam Malachi for months, according the explosive Ocean County lawsuit.<\/p>\n<p>Malachi, then a single mom, had approached Appel for financial help with daycare bills \u201cduring a period of acute financial distress\u201d in 2020, says her suit filed earlier this year in Ocean County Civil Court.<\/p>\n<p>Appel helped her financially, the lawsuit says. But things took a dark turn in June 2022, when Appel sexually assaulted her as she was home alone, court documents allege.<\/p>\n<p>Appel \u201cforced himself\u201d on Malachi and \u201ctook sexual advantage of her\u201d multiple times afterward, the suit claims.<\/p>\n<p>He also sent her lewd texts with \u201cincredibly crude and graphic sexual content,\u201d including descriptions of oral sex, his desire to \u201csqueeze your breasts\u201d and an image of his genitals, the lawsuit says.<\/p>\n<p>Appel wrote under the genitals image, \u201cNot great. But works,\u201d court documents claim.<\/p>\n<p>When Malachi finally threatened to sue last fall, a vicious smear website popped up calling her \u201cA DANGER TO KLAL YISROEL\u201d \u2014 roughly meaning a threat to all Jewish people, her suit says.<\/p>\n<p>Malachi claims Appel\u2019s allies even plastered defamatory flyers at her children\u2019s private school, according to the court papers.<\/p>\n<p>Appel allegedly offered $50,000 to buy her silence before his lawsuit threat, a move she \u201cvehemently rejected,\u201d the suit says.<\/p>\n<p>Appel and his lawyers have denied all of the accusations, claiming that the pair only had a \u201cbusiness relationship,\u201d court papers show.<\/p>\n<p>His lawyer, Ian Goldman, told The Post on Tuesday that Malachi\u2019s \u201ccredibility, motives, and factual assertions are not only disputed but entirely fabricated.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Goldman added that the \u201cscreenshots are fabricated and form part of what he contends is an extensive extortion and smear campaign directed against him,\u201d and that Appel claims \u201ceven a cursory examination of the photographs at issue demonstrates that the individual depicted is not him.\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Half of the conversion courts in Orthodox Judaism in Los Angeles are led by predators (and have been been for decades), but the people with the goods are too difficult for me to work with, and they usually recognize it is not in their interest to go public with the damning evidence. <\/p>\n<p>Along with dozens of other journos, I knew that Harvey Weinstein was a creep before he was finally outed, but the story was too difficult for me to report. One day a brave soul will provide the story on how some conversions operate in Orthodox Judaism in ways that would sicken normal people. <\/p>\n<p>Orthodox rabbis are like other men in their appetites. They enjoy power and they enjoy getting what they want when they think they can get away with it. They are not better nor worse than other men. <\/p>\n<p>If an institution, religious or otherwise, believes it can get away with theft, it will often try to get away with theft. <\/p>\n<p>We all bear some responsibility for how people treat us, and for how our institutions behave, and how our leaders operate. <\/p>\n<p>Rav Avrohom Yeshaya Appel, also written Avraham Yeshaya Appel, is an American Orthodox rabbi and the founder and rosh kollel of Kollel Cheshek Shlomo in <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Lakewood_Township,_New_Jersey\">Lakewood, New Jersey<\/a>. He built the institution from a small founding group in 2018 into one of the larger advanced kollelim in the town. He became a recognized figure in the Lakewood Torah world before a 2026 civil suit carried his name into the secular press.<\/p>\n<p>Appel trained in the Lithuanian yeshiva tradition. He learned within the orbit of <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Beth_Medrash_Govoha\">Beth Medrash Govoha<\/a>, the Lakewood yeshiva that Rav <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Aharon_Kotler\">Aharon Kotler<\/a> founded and that turned the town into a center of advanced <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Talmud\">Talmud<\/a> study. The Lakewood press describes him as a talmid of the Noviminsker and Brisker yeshivos and as the go-to person in Beis Medrash Govoha&#8217;s Princeton upstairs beis medrash, a powerhouse of clear thinking and intense learning. Before he opened his own kollel he led a chaburah at the <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Mir_Yeshiva_(Jerusalem)\">Mir<\/a> in Jerusalem. That chaburah devoted twelve hours a day to learning, and Appel later sought to duplicate it in Lakewood and struggled. He has cited Rav <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Shmuel_Kamenetsky\">Shmuel Kamenetsky<\/a> and Rav Yeruchem Olshin as the men he consulted before he moved ahead, and he is associated through his learning with Rav Asher Arieli of the Mir.<\/p>\n<p>He founded Kollel Cheshek Shlomo in 2018. The kollel launched that year with twenty-four founding yungerleit drawn from the yeshivos of Fallsburg, Philadelphia, Keren HaTorah, Rabbi Slomowitz, and others, and within four and a half years it expanded to more than seventy members. The kollel runs an admissions bar that sets it apart from most. Each man passes an oral bechinah on 250 blatt before he joins, then completes entire masechtos with both iyun and bekiyus, with regular chazaros and bechinos to hold him to account. A subsidiary, Chaburas Kinyan Torah, runs on the same derech halimud, and the kollel&#8217;s own count puts the combined number above two hundred men.<\/p>\n<p>The model rests on a claim Appel repeats. You cannot produce a gadol, he says, but you can provide the right environment that lets the yungerman reach gadlus. The kollel acts on that claim by removing the ordinary pressures on a young family. It runs a set schedule, serves fresh daily meals, and subsidizes daycare under its own auspices. Visitors to the beis medrash, in accounts the kollel circulates to donors, describe warmth and calm where they expect strain. These accounts come from the institution and its supporters, and they read as the language of a fundraising operation. They tell you what the kollel wants its donors to see.<\/p>\n<p>The most concrete piece of Appel&#8217;s communal work is brick and land. He envisions a campus that gives the yungerleit a full day of learning at an affordable price, with a daycare center for their children in their own backyard, and a housing project that charges roughly fifty percent of the market rate, just enough to cover the mortgage. In January 2024 he presented the plan to the Lakewood Planning Board himself, alongside the kollel&#8217;s engineer, to a room full of supporters, and the board delayed its decision. The reporting describes opposition from neighbors over the use of a residential zone. The plan, as the kollel states it, develops four acres outside West Gate into housing built next to the beis medrash, so that a man loses no time to traffic between learning, home, and daycare.<\/p>\n<p>This work places Appel inside a wider shift in the role of the American Orthodox rabbi. The scholar still draws his authority from learning. But the prominent rabbi now raises money, mediates, counsels, and builds. In a town knit together by yeshivos, charities, schools, and businesses, a man&#8217;s reach often turns on the people who trust him rather than on his title. Appel ran several charities and counseled women in hard circumstances, and that role sits at the center of the case against him.<\/p>\n<p>In 2026 Miryam Malachi, an Israeli-born mother of two, sued Appel in Ocean County (docket number OCN-L-000016-26, filed around January 5, 2026). The complaint (<a href=\"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/CivilCaseJacket.pdf\">copy here<\/a> <a href=\"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/CivilCaseJacket-1.pdf\">additional<\/a> <a href=\"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/CivilCaseJacket-2.pdf\">documents<\/a> <a href=\"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/CivilCaseJacket-3.pdf\">here<\/a>) alleges that she came to him during acute financial distress over daycare bills, on a teacher&#8217;s suggestion, and that he presented himself as a rabbi, mentor, and friend she could trust. The suit alleges that he then used that position to exploit and assault her over a period that began in 2020, with an alleged assault in June 2022, explicit messages, and an image of his genitals. The complaint further alleges that he threatened her, told her that an inmate who had taken the fall for him in another matter would take care of her if she spoke, and warned that he would have her exiled from the community. It alleges that he insisted she see a therapist he chose and scripted what she should say so that she could get help without revealing what had happened. The suit says he offered fifty thousand dollars for her silence, which she rejected, and that after she threatened to sue, a website appeared calling her a danger to klal yisroel and flyers went up at her children&#8217;s school. The complaint says subpoenaed GoDaddy records tied the site to Appel&#8217;s cell phone, his brother&#8217;s email, and his business partner&#8217;s credit card.<\/p>\n<p>Appel denies all of it. His lawyer, Ian Goldman, told the <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/New_York_Post\">New York Post<\/a> that Malachi&#8217;s credibility, motives, and factual claims are not only disputed but fabricated, that the screenshots are fabricated and part of an extortion and smear campaign against his client, and that the man in the photographs is not Appel. Appel&#8217;s filings accuse Malachi of fraud and extortion and deny any tie to the website. As of June 2026 the litigation continues and no court has ruled on the allegations.<\/p>\n<p>Gemini says: <\/p>\n<blockquote><p>The legal documents show a high-stakes clash between the explicit, graphic evidence presented by the plaintiff and a total denial of those facts by the defense.The most striking elements of the case logic from the filings include:<\/p>\n<p>The Text and Photo Evidence: Miryam Malachi submitted screenshots showing graphic text messages and a photograph of genitals sent from a number associated with Avraham Appel. The defense claims these screenshots are completely fabricated and part of an extortion plot.  <\/p>\n<p>The Admission Claim: The brief in CivilCaseJacket (3).pdf relies heavily on a certification from Rabbi Joseph Rabinowicz, who states that Appel previously admitted to other rabbis that he had a &#8220;problem&#8221; and did &#8220;terrible things&#8221; with the plaintiff, resulting in an directive for him to step down from positions of trust in 2024.  <\/p>\n<p>The Financial Records: Exhibit 1 contains extensive Zelle transaction logs showing regular payments from Diversified Charities Inc. to the plaintiff spanning 2022 and 2023. The plaintiff characterizes these as part of a grooming and control structure, while the defense frames them as standard business advances or loans related to real estate work.  <\/p>\n<p>The Counter-Smear Allegations: The lawsuit targets not just the assault, but a coordinated effort by Appel and his allies to destroy Malachi&#8217;s real estate network through a predatory website, physical flyers at her children&#8217;s school, and community exile.  The case highlights how digital evidence like text logs and banking receipts are weaponized by both sides in a tight-knit community where reputation directly dictates economic survival.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Claude says: <\/p>\n<blockquote><p>First, the frame. This is her verified complaint, signed under penalty, so every line is her sworn allegation plus her lawyers&#8217; shaping. The strongest material is not her narrative. It sits in the defendants&#8217; own words, which she reproduces, and several of those cut against them.<br \/>\nThe charity is the spine of the thing. Appel runs Diversified Charities, a 501(c)(3), and the money to Malachi moved through it as Zelle transfers. Exhibit 1 is two years of them, tagged in the memo line: &#8220;loan,&#8221; &#8220;therapy,&#8221; &#8220;doctor,&#8221; &#8220;shabbos,&#8221; &#8220;water shutoff,&#8221; &#8220;school supplies,&#8221; &#8220;meds,&#8221; &#8220;Rosh hashana,&#8221; &#8220;food.&#8221; Whatever a court decides about consent, the paper shows a woman kept on small tax-exempt sums pegged to her most basic needs. And the spike lands where it hurts him most. The payments jump in late June 2022, right after the alleged June 1 assault: $1,500, $2,000, $1,000, $5,000, $7,500 across two weeks. Donor money, routed through a charity, clustering around the date she says he forced himself on her. That is the part a reporter chases, and the part a charity board and the IRS might chase too.<br \/>\nTwo defenses run through the file that cannot both stand. His lawyer told the Post the man in the photographs is not Appel. But the contemporaneous chat in Exhibit 4 has a third party reporting that Appel &#8220;claims it&#8217;s not him and he never knew it was being recorded.&#8221; Not-him and didn&#8217;t-know-I-was-recorded are different worlds. The first says the images are of someone else. The second concedes the images are of him and fights over the recording. You can hold either. You cannot hold both, and his own circle voiced both.<br \/>\nThe &#8220;extortion&#8221; evidence the defendants chose to publish points back at them. Their website quotes her alleged demand: pay $48,000 and &#8220;admit on video that you did this,&#8221; then she leaves him alone. A person inventing a false charge does not usually set the price of silence at a videotaped confession. A demand to admit &#8220;this&#8221; presupposes a &#8220;this.&#8221; They put that line forward as proof of a shakedown. Read plainly, it reads as someone after acknowledgment.<br \/>\nThe flagship fraud claim collapses inside the same file. The site&#8217;s lead exhibit of her thieving is the &#8220;Hachnasas Kallah scam,&#8221; money she supposedly pocketed from a couple&#8217;s wedding fund. The couple gave a sworn certification: she raised $2,000, the celebration cost $10,000, and she and her husband covered the $8,000 gap themselves. Their best example of her greed turns, on the record, into an example of her generosity.<br \/>\nThe coalition against her is not one motive. Three defendants, and Chaya Rosenzweig runs Rose Capital Group, which chases the same Israeli investors Malachi chases, in the same small market where a name is the whole business. She had asserted claims against Malachi before a beis din already and, per the complaint, could not prove them. So the smear blends a man burying an assault with a rival burying a competitor and getting ahead of her own unhappy investors. Mixed motives, one website.<br \/>\nThe rabbinic process is the place to watch already happened here, in both directions. In July 2024 Rabbi Joseph Rabinovich gathered other rabbis, ran an intervention, and, per the complaint, Appel admitted he &#8220;had done terrible things&#8221; and had &#8220;a problem.&#8221; The rabbis ordered him to step down from every position of trust. Then by November 2025 a different rabbi, Rabbi Pearl, let him teach again, and Rabinovich, the man who once moved against him, now runs the school, calls security, and threatens the husband with police. The ranks broke against him and then closed back around the institution. The tip and the snap-back, in one set of names.<br \/>\nThe campaign is signed. Keleti put it on Facebook under his own name with his own face, and posted the public warning to the Lakewood community on flyers. A smear that wants deniability stays anonymous. This one is notarized by its authors, which is either confidence or a blunder, and in a tort suit it is a gift to the plaintiff.<br \/>\nThen the milieu, the part Tom Wolfe would open on. A white Lexus, a cash house in The Palm Estates, the Westgate apartment on Green Cove, Rose Capital, Sapphire, Beaver Hill, Israeli syndication money. The site means &#8220;she drives a Lexus and lives in a mansion&#8221; as proof she is no poor victim. It also shows the world these people actually live in, real-estate dealmaking in frum dress, a long way from the kollel poverty the fundraising pages sell.<br \/>\nTwo asides get dropped almost in passing and would lead a story on their own. She alleges he threatened her with &#8220;an inmate that had taken the fall for Appel in connection with another matter.&#8221; And she alleges he picked her therapist and scripted what she could say, so she could get help without telling the truth, control reaching even into her healing.<br \/>\nThe defendants&#8217; own page brags that &#8220;the Rosh Kollel was back in Bais Medrash the next day,&#8221; and closes with &#8220;Good people don&#8217;t need to scream. The truth rises on its own. And Hashem will take care of the rest.&#8221; The compulsion to keep teaching and the sanctified silence, written out by his own side, in public, as praise.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Gemini says: <\/p>\n<blockquote><p>\nThe observation regarding Diversified Charities is the most legally damaging element for the defense. The Zelle memo lines in Exhibit 1 show a systematic structure of small, dependency-inducing sums (&#8220;water shutoff,&#8221; &#8220;school supplies,&#8221; &#8220;meds&#8221;) punctuated by a massive surge in cash flow immediately following the alleged June 1, 2022 assault. Moving $17,000 across a two-week window under the banner of a 501(c)(3) to a woman alleging immediate prior assault creates a severe tracking logic that an internal board, a state attorney general, or the IRS would find difficult to ignore, irrespective of any defense standard regarding real estate draws.<\/p>\n<p>The tension between the public defense and the internal circle&#8217;s communications exposes a fatal strategic fracture:<\/p>\n<p>The Photograph Defense: The formal press statement claims the individual depicted in the explicit photographs is not Appel. Yet, the text log in Exhibit 4 records a direct admission from within the camp stating that Appel claimed he &#8220;never knew it was being recorded&#8221;. As Claude notes, an assertion of non-identity cannot coexist with an assertion of non-consent to recording. In a secular court, this contradiction destroys the credibility of the defense&#8217;s initial pleadings.  <\/p>\n<p>The Extortion Defense: The malachichavala.com website publishes what it frames as shakedown evidence\u2014a demand for $48,000 and a videotaped confession[cite: 1, 2]. Legally, presenting a demand for a video confession as proof of simple extortion is a catastrophic miscalculation. It demonstrates that the target of the demand was the acknowledgment of an act, establishing a specific context (&#8220;this&#8221;) rather than a clean, unhedged financial extraction[cite: 1, 2].<\/p>\n<p>The defense&#8217;s public-facing narrative depends entirely on establishing the plaintiff as a serial fabricator, yet its cornerstone examples fall apart under cross-verification within the file:<\/p>\n<p>The Wedding Fund: The website frames the wedding of Binyamin Doyev and Tehila Recht as a clear cash grab[cite: 1, 2]. The couple&#8217;s sworn certification in CivilCaseJacket.pdf directly reverses this narrative, transforming a public accusation of theft into a documented record of personal subsidy by the plaintiff and her husband.  <\/p>\n<p>The presence of Chaya Rosenzweig as a co-defendant ties the personal destruction campaign directly to market competition. By matching the network of Israeli real estate investors targeted by Rose Capital Group with the plaintiff&#8217;s own investment network, the smear campaign loses its character as a detached community warning and exposes an engine of tortious interference aimed at economic survival.  <\/p>\n<p>The transition between the summer of 2024 and the winter of 2025 illustrates the institutional consolidation typical of high-stakes community disputes. The rabbinic intervention by Rabbi Joseph Rabinowicz initially produced an internal admission and an order to step down. By November 2025, the introduction of a new rabbinic authority (Rabbi Pearl) allowed a rehabilitation, and the very school used for the intervention weaponized its physical security and law enforcement contact against the plaintiff&#8217;s husband. The institutional framework fractured under the weight of the evidence, then rapidly closed ranks to protect its core assets.  The entire strategy deployed by the defendants\u2014notarizing their own campaign by using direct names on social media and flyers\u2014removes any path to plausible deniability[cite: 1, 2]. In a New Jersey Law Division action, it hands the plaintiff absolute proximity to the authors of the defamatory material.<\/p>\n<p>The filings and public reports outline a distinct network of co-defendants, family members, rabbinic figures, and entities that drive the personal, commercial, and institutional engines of this dispute.<\/p>\n<p>Co-Defendants and Camp Members<\/p>\n<p>Chaya Rosenzweig: A New Jersey licensed real estate professional and the founder and owner of Rose Capital Group. Her business markets commercial real estate investment opportunities in Ocean County to Israeli investors, placing her in direct market competition with Malachi. Malachi alleges that Rosenzweig&#8217;s animus stems from direct commercial rivalry and the fact that Malachi researched and identified irregularities in some of Rosenzweig&#8217;s underperforming properties. Rosenzweig is accused of curating and manipulating the defamatory content published on the smear website after a previous attempt to bring claims against Malachi in a rabbinical court failed.  <\/p>\n<p>Robert Keleti (Moshe Kelety): <\/p>\n<p>Chaya Rosenzweig&#8217;s father and a close ally of Appel. He was Malachi&#8217;s immediate neighbor during her time residing at the Westgate apartment complex on Green Cove. Keleti provided the specific public accusation that Malachi had an inappropriate &#8220;revolving door&#8221; of late-night male visitors. He is also alleged to have taken the primary public operational role in the smear campaign by posting links to the website on his personal Facebook account and physically distributing signs and fliers throughout the Lakewood community.  <\/p>\n<p>Ian Goldman, Esq.: Partner at the law firm Levin Shea Pfeffer &#038; Goldman, P.A., representing Avraham Appel. In late 2024, Goldman conducted a meeting with Malachi and her current husband where he allegedly offered a $50,000 lump-sum payment for future therapy costs in exchange for a full confidentiality release regarding the sexual assault. On November 16, 2025, Goldman issued formal civil &#8220;No Trespass\/No Contact&#8221; warnings to Malachi&#8217;s husband following confrontations at Appel&#8217;s school.  <\/p>\n<p>Yehonatan (Yoni) Richenberg: Malachi&#8217;s current husband under Jewish law. He rejected the defense&#8217;s early financial resolution offer and directly confronted the administration at Appel&#8217;s school in November 2025 after learning Appel had resumed teaching. The defense website accuses him of attempting to extort $48,000 from Appel via text message, an allegation Richenberg swore under penalty of perjury is a complete fabrication.  <\/p>\n<p>Ari L.: Malachi&#8217;s former husband. Text message logs from December 2025 indicate that both Appel and Rosenzweig contacted him months prior in an explicit attempt to enlist his assistance to &#8220;take down&#8221; Malachi.  <\/p>\n<p>Rabbinic Figures<\/p>\n<p>Rabbi Joseph Rabinowicz (Rabinovich): A central rabbinic authority whose role shifts dramatically across the timeline. In July 2024, he reviewed Malachi&#8217;s evidence, convened a panel of rabbis, and confronted Appel, securing an admission of guilt and ordering him to step down from all community positions. By November 2025, however, he was running the school where Appel returned to teach and threatened to have Malachi&#8217;s husband arrested by security and local police for trespassing.  Rabbi Pearl: A rabbinic advisor who entered the dispute around November 2025. According to school administration, he issued a counter-ruling that effectively bypassed the 2024 rabbinic intervention, permitting Appel to resume his teaching duties.  <\/p>\n<p>Rabbi Forscheimer: A prominent community rabbi cited on the defense website as a key authority who supposedly demanded Malachi hand over her phone for forensic screening three times. Malachi&#8217;s certification states that when she met with him after the website went live, Rabbi Forscheimer confirmed first-hand that he had never spoken to her or her husband and had never requested her phone.  <\/p>\n<p>Corporate, Charitable, and Investment Institutions<\/p>\n<p>Diversified Charities, Inc.: A purported 501(c)(3) charitable organization run by Appel. Banking transaction records from Exhibit 1 demonstrate that Appel systematically routed organizational funds via Zelle to Malachi under memo categories like &#8220;loan,&#8221; &#8220;groceries,&#8221; &#8220;therapy,&#8221; and &#8220;water bill&#8221;. Legally, this entity serves as the financial conduit for the alleged grooming and subsequent hush-money structure.  <\/p>\n<p>Kollel Cheshek Shlomo: A religious private school and seminary owned and operated by Appel in the Orthodox community of Lakewood, New Jersey. This institution served as Appel&#8217;s base of local spiritual authority and became the primary physical flashpoint for confrontations and the subsequent deployment of security and &#8220;no trespass&#8221; directives.  <\/p>\n<p>Rose Capital Group: The commercial real estate firm founded and owned by Chaya Rosenzweig. It structures and syndicates commercial real estate equity placements, specifically pulling from a network of investors based in Israel\u2014the exact financial ecosystem that Malachi relied on for her own livelihood.  <\/p>\n<p>Sapphire Investment Group, LLC and 15 Beaver Hill, LLC: Ocean County-based real estate development entities for which Malachi solicited capital. Following the launch of the defamatory website, these specific investment vehicles became the site of immediate financial damage, forcing the refund and wire return of hundreds of thousands of dollars to panicked investors.  <\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>The case set Appel at the center of an argument that runs through many faith communities and not his alone. A tight community protects its respected men, and that instinct can shield a leader from scrutiny or can crush a complainant before her claim is heard. The same closeness that lets a man raise a million dollars and build homes for young scholars also lets a man, if the worst allegations against him hold, exert pressure on a single mother who came to him for help. Which story the record supports is the question the court has yet to answer.<\/p>\n<p>Whatever the outcome, Appel&#8217;s path shows several features of Lakewood life in this decade. Advanced learning still sits at the center. The kollel has grown into an engine of housing, childcare, and money as much as of Torah. And the rabbi who runs it carries the weight of all those roles at once, under a public scrutiny that the digital age has sharpened and that the older structures of the community were not built to meet.<\/p>\n<p>Rabbi Henoch Perl is an Orthodox rabbi and communal leader in Lakewood, New Jersey, whose role in the dispute involving Miryam Malachi and Rabbi Avraham Appel places him at a critical junction between allegations of misconduct, rabbinic authority, institutional decision-making, and communal rehabilitation. Although he is not a party to the litigation and has not submitted a public certification in the court filings, the record portrays him as a significant rabbinic figure whose guidance allegedly influenced Appel&#8217;s return to teaching after an earlier intervention by other rabbis reportedly resulted in restrictions on Appel&#8217;s communal activities. As a result, Perl occupies an important position in understanding how authority functions within Lakewood&#8217;s decentralized network of religious institutions.<\/p>\n<p>Unlike some of the other rabbis mentioned in the litigation, Rabbi Perl is a readily identifiable public figure within the Lakewood Orthodox community. He serves as the Rav of Beis Medrash Beis Shmuel, also known as Congregation Bais Shmuel, a synagogue located on Buckwald Court in Lakewood. Over the years he has established himself as a communal rabbi, lecturer, and teacher whose influence extends beyond his own congregation. His standing within the community helps explain why school administrators and communal institutions would regard his guidance as carrying substantial weight in matters involving religious leadership, personal conduct, and communal participation.<\/p>\n<p>The litigation introduces Rabbi Perl relatively late in the chronology. According to the filings, his involvement became visible around November 2025, more than a year after an earlier rabbinic intervention involving Appel. That prior intervention, according to the plaintiff&#8217;s submissions, was led by Rabbi Yosef Rabinowicz and other rabbis who reviewed evidence concerning allegations made by Miryam Malachi. The filings allege that Appel admitted he had &#8220;a problem&#8221; and had done &#8220;terrible things,&#8221; and that he subsequently agreed to step away from positions of trust and authority within the community. Whether those allegations will ultimately be substantiated remains a matter for litigation, but they form the backdrop against which Perl&#8217;s later role acquires significance.<\/p>\n<p>Rabbi Perl enters the documentary record through the certification of Yehonatan Richenberg, Malachi&#8217;s husband. Richenberg states that when he confronted school officials regarding Appel&#8217;s return to teaching, he was informed that Appel was now under the guidance of Rabbi Henoch Perl and that Perl had authorized or approved Appel&#8217;s resumption of teaching duties. Under this account, Perl&#8217;s involvement functioned as the rabbinic basis upon which administrators justified Appel&#8217;s return to the classroom. The filings do not provide details regarding the process that led to this determination, nor do they explain whether Perl reviewed evidence, interviewed witnesses, consulted earlier participants, or imposed any conditions upon Appel.<\/p>\n<p>This apparent approval has made Perl one of the most strategically important non-party figures in the dispute. His significance lies not primarily in the underlying allegations themselves but in what his involvement reveals about the operation of authority within Orthodox communal life. Outsiders often imagine religious communities as operating through a single chain of command. Lakewood, however, is characterized by overlapping networks of rabbinic influence, educational institutions, synagogues, charitable organizations, and informal relationships. Authority is often distributed among respected rabbis rather than concentrated in a single office.<\/p>\n<p>Within such a system, disciplinary decisions can be fluid. A restriction imposed through one rabbinic framework may later be modified, reinterpreted, or effectively lifted through the involvement of another respected authority. The filings suggest that Perl&#8217;s guidance may have played precisely this role. Whether he viewed himself as revisiting the earlier allegations, addressing a separate pastoral question, evaluating Appel&#8217;s rehabilitation, or reaching an entirely independent conclusion remains unknown. What is clear is that his judgment allegedly provided administrators with a religious rationale for allowing Appel to resume teaching.<\/p>\n<p>Additional references in later filings reportedly suggest that Perl was not merely a symbolic figure whose name was invoked after the fact. He is described as serving as Appel&#8217;s rabbi during the relevant period and appears to have been actively engaged in discussions surrounding the controversy. Reports of a recorded conversation involving Perl and Rabbi Yosef Rabinowicz indicate direct communication between representatives of the two rabbinic camps associated with different phases of the dispute. If accurate, such communications would suggest that Perl occupied a more active role than simply offering private guidance to Appel.<\/p>\n<p>At the same time, much about his involvement remains opaque. Unlike Rabbi Yosef Rabinowicz, whose alleged role is reflected through certifications submitted to the court, Rabbi Perl has not publicly explained his actions in the litigation record. Consequently, many of the most important questions surrounding his involvement remain unanswered. What information did he review? Did he speak directly with Malachi or her representatives? Did he consult participants in the earlier intervention? Did he regard the prior restrictions as temporary, satisfied, or mistaken? Was his approval unconditional or subject to ongoing supervision? The public record presently offers no definitive answers.<\/p>\n<p>From a broader sociological perspective, Perl&#8217;s role highlights the complex balance between accountability and reintegration within religious communities. Every community must confront difficult questions concerning allegations of misconduct, punishment, rehabilitation, forgiveness, and return to public life. The filings place Rabbi Perl at precisely that intersection. Whether he ultimately emerges as a witness to institutional rehabilitation, a defender of due process, a pastoral advisor seeking reconciliation, or simply a rabbi whose actions have been misunderstood will depend on facts that have yet to be fully developed.<\/p>\n<p>For now, Rabbi Henoch Perl stands as one of the most consequential secondary figures in the controversy. He is neither accuser nor accused. Rather, he appears as the rabbinic authority whose guidance allegedly helped shape the transition from restriction to reintegration. In a dispute defined by competing narratives about power, trust, authority, and communal responsibility, few individuals occupy a more strategically important position than the rabbi whose judgment allegedly reopened the door.<\/p>\n<p>Rabbi Joseph Rabinowicz occupies one of the most intriguing and potentially consequential positions in the litigation involving Miryam Malachi and Rabbi Avraham Appel. Unlike the named parties, he appears in the record primarily as a witness, communal authority, and institutional actor whose alleged actions illuminate how Lakewood&#8217;s rabbinic establishment responds when accusations are directed at one of its own leaders. The court filings place him at critical junctures in the chronology and portray him as possessing sufficient authority to convene rabbinic panels, evaluate evidence, influence communal standing, and shape the practical consequences faced by accused individuals. Yet the record also contains ambiguities surrounding his precise identity and role, making him a figure whose significance extends beyond the immediate allegations.<\/p>\n<p>Little public biographical information is available concerning Rabinowicz outside the context of this dispute. The filings nevertheless suggest that he occupies a position of substantial respect within Lakewood&#8217;s Orthodox community. According to the plaintiff&#8217;s legal submissions, he was among the rabbis approached after Miryam Malachi presented evidence regarding her allegations against Appel. The filings state that Rabinowicz reviewed the material, participated in convening other rabbis, and became involved in an intervention designed to address the allegations internally before they entered the secular legal system.<\/p>\n<p>According to the plaintiff&#8217;s account, the intervention represented a rare example of internal communal accountability. The filings allege that Rabinowicz and other rabbis confronted Appel regarding the allegations and that Appel admitted he had &#8220;a problem&#8221; and had done &#8220;terrible things&#8221; involving Malachi. The plaintiff&#8217;s attorneys rely heavily on this alleged admission because it originates not from Malachi herself but from respected insiders operating within the community&#8217;s own system of authority. If corroborated through testimony, such evidence would carry significance far beyond ordinary litigation because it would suggest that concerns regarding Appel&#8217;s conduct were acknowledged within the rabbinic establishment itself rather than arising solely from outside accusations. The filings further assert that Appel was directed to relinquish positions of trust and communal authority as a result of the intervention.<\/p>\n<p>The importance of Rabinowicz&#8217;s alleged role lies not merely in the underlying allegations but in what it reveals about communal governance. In tightly knit Orthodox communities, social legitimacy often depends on the judgments of respected rabbis as much as on formal legal processes. A directive to step away from teaching, counseling, fundraising, or leadership functions can amount to an informal but highly effective disciplinary sanction. As portrayed by the plaintiff, Rabinowicz served as one of the architects of such a response.<\/p>\n<p>The record becomes more complicated when the timeline reaches late 2025. According to the certification of Yehonatan Richenberg, Malachi&#8217;s husband, Appel had resumed teaching despite the earlier intervention. Richenberg states that he visited the school associated with Appel and encountered a Rabbi Rabinovich who informed him that Appel was now under the guidance of Rabbi Pearl and had been permitted to return to teaching. When Richenberg continued appearing at the school, he alleges that security personnel were present and that Rabbi Rabinovich warned him to leave or face police involvement.<\/p>\n<p>A subtle but important ambiguity emerges here. The filings elsewhere refer to Rabbi Joseph Rabinowicz, while Richenberg&#8217;s certification identifies Rabbi Rabinovich and explicitly notes that he was &#8220;a different rabbi than the one mentioned above.&#8221; This distinction creates one of the most overlooked questions in the litigation. If the two men are in fact different rabbis with nearly identical surnames, then the apparent contradiction in the community&#8217;s response may not reflect a personal reversal by a single authority figure. Instead, it may represent a transfer of responsibility from one rabbinic authority involved in discipline and investigation to another involved in institutional administration. Under that interpretation, what appears at first glance to be a dramatic change of position becomes evidence of competing functions within the community&#8217;s leadership structure.<\/p>\n<p>If, however, the names refer to the same individual and the distinction is mistaken, the chronology would suggest a far more dramatic shift. The same rabbi who allegedly participated in confronting Appel and facilitating restrictions on his authority would later appear associated with the environment in which Appel resumed teaching. The public record presently does not resolve this question.<\/p>\n<p>The physical setting of the later confrontation is also significant. The filings identify Kollel Cheshek Shlomo as the religious school owned and operated by Appel. This detail transforms the institutional analysis. The school was not described as an independent organization evaluating Appel from a distance. Rather, according to the complaint, it was closely connected to Appel himself. Consequently, the actions of administrators and security personnel at the school take on broader meaning because they involve the protection of an institution allegedly founded and controlled by the person at the center of the dispute.<\/p>\n<p>The appearance of Rabbi Pearl introduces another layer to the story. According to Richenberg&#8217;s certification, Appel&#8217;s return to teaching was explained through the authority of Rabbi Pearl, who had become Appel&#8217;s new rabbinic adviser and had approved his resumption of educational duties. The significance of this allegation lies in its illustration of how authority functions within decentralized religious communities. Rather than operating through a single hierarchical structure, Orthodox communal life often involves overlapping networks of respected rabbis whose judgments may differ. One rabbinic grouping may conclude that restrictions are warranted, while another may determine that rehabilitation, supervision, or renewed participation is appropriate. The filings suggest that such a process may have occurred here, though the underlying facts remain disputed.<\/p>\n<p>From a litigation standpoint, Rabinowicz remains one of the most important potential witnesses in the case. If he testifies, he may help clarify whether Appel made the alleged admissions, how the 2024 intervention unfolded, what restrictions were imposed, who participated in the decision-making process, and whether later developments altered the community&#8217;s assessment of the allegations. Few individuals appear better positioned to explain the internal response of the Orthodox community to the controversy.<\/p>\n<p>Whether viewed as a communal investigator, disciplinary authority, institutional administrator, or potential witness, Rabbi Joseph Rabinowicz stands at the intersection of nearly every major theme in the case: religious authority, communal accountability, reputation, institutional self-preservation, and the complex relationship between rabbinic governance and secular law. The unresolved questions surrounding his role may ultimately prove as revealing as the answers.<\/p>\n<p>Rabbi Yaakov Forchheimer is one of the most respected rabbinic authorities in Lakewood, New Jersey, and occupies a distinctive place in the litigation involving Miryam Malachi and Rabbi Avraham Appel. Unlike other rabbis who appear in the record as alleged investigators, advisers, or decision-makers, Forchheimer&#8217;s importance arises from a dispute over the use of his authority rather than from direct participation in the underlying events. In the court filings and related public controversy, he emerges as a figure whose reputation became a contested asset in a broader struggle over credibility, legitimacy, and communal trust.<\/p>\n<p>Forchheimer is a senior posek and communal rabbinic leader whose influence extends well beyond a single congregation. He has long been associated with the Lakewood rabbinic establishment and is widely recognized for his involvement in matters of halachic decision-making, communal guidance, and religious adjudication. He is identified with Bais Din Maysharim, one of the rabbinic institutions that helps resolve disputes and provide religious rulings within the Orthodox community. Through decades of scholarship, teaching, and communal involvement, he has become one of the figures whose opinions carry substantial weight among families, educators, businesspeople, and community leaders throughout Lakewood.<\/p>\n<p>This standing explains why his name became significant in the dispute between Malachi and Appel. In a community where rabbinic authority functions as a primary source of social trust, the endorsement or perceived endorsement of a respected rabbi can have consequences far beyond those of an ordinary witness statement. A senior rabbi&#8217;s opinion may influence not only how allegations are viewed but also how institutions, schools, business networks, and families respond to them.<\/p>\n<p>Within the controversy, Forchheimer first appears not through a sworn certification or personal statement but through claims attributed to him on the website and materials created as part of the public campaign against Malachi. According to the plaintiff&#8217;s filings, the website asserted that senior rabbis, including Rabbi Forchheimer, had requested that Malachi surrender her cellular phone for forensic examination on multiple occasions. The website further suggested that her alleged refusal to comply was itself significant evidence against her and contributed to the conclusion that her allegations lacked credibility.<\/p>\n<p>The strategic importance of that claim is difficult to overstate. At the center of the litigation are disputed text messages, screenshots, photographs, electronic communications, and allegations of fabrication. By invoking Forchheimer&#8217;s name, the website effectively sought to frame the dispute not merely as a disagreement between two individuals but as a matter that had supposedly been reviewed by respected rabbinic authorities pursuing objective verification. Under that narrative, the issue was transformed from a personal accusation into a question of evidence preservation and forensic examination.<\/p>\n<p>The plaintiff&#8217;s filings, however, present a sharply different account. According to Malachi&#8217;s certification, after the website appeared she personally met with Rabbi Forchheimer to discuss the claims being attributed to him. She alleges that during that meeting he informed her that he had never previously spoken with either her or her husband and had never requested possession of her phone for forensic review. If her account is accurate, the implications extend well beyond a simple factual error. The authority of a senior rabbinic figure would have been invoked publicly despite his having no actual involvement in the investigative process being described.<\/p>\n<p>This dispute places Forchheimer in a unique position within the litigation. Unlike Rabbi Yosef Rabinowicz, whose alleged role concerns the 2024 intervention involving Appel, or Rabbi Henoch Perl, whose alleged role concerns Appel&#8217;s later return to teaching, Forchheimer&#8217;s significance centers on a comparatively narrow but highly consequential factual question: was his authority accurately represented?<\/p>\n<p>That question matters because it is unusually objective. Much of the broader litigation involves competing narratives, conflicting memories, disputed motives, and allegations that may be difficult to prove conclusively. The Forchheimer issue is comparatively straightforward. Either he requested access to the phone, authorized such a request, participated in discussions regarding forensic review, or he did not. Unlike broader questions regarding personal relationships or intent, this is a matter potentially susceptible to direct testimony and documentary corroboration.<\/p>\n<p>For that reason, Forchheimer may ultimately become one of the most important credibility witnesses in the case. His testimony would not necessarily determine whether the underlying allegations against Appel are true or false. Rather, it could clarify whether a major component of the public campaign against Malachi accurately reflected the involvement of respected rabbinic authorities. In that sense, his role is less about the underlying misconduct allegations and more about the competing efforts to establish legitimacy within the community.<\/p>\n<p>From a sociological perspective, Forchheimer&#8217;s appearance in the dispute highlights the importance of symbolic authority in tightly knit religious environments. Public controversies are often fought not only through facts but through appeals to trusted figures whose reputations serve as signals of credibility. The struggle over Forchheimer&#8217;s role reflects a deeper contest over who gets to claim the support of the community&#8217;s most respected institutions and leaders.<\/p>\n<p>As matters currently stand, Rabbi Forchheimer remains largely an indirect participant. He has not publicly aligned himself with either side through sworn filings. His role is known primarily through statements attributed to him by others and through Malachi&#8217;s account of her meeting with him. Yet that very distance may enhance his significance. Because he is neither a principal actor nor an obvious partisan, his eventual testimony could carry unusual weight.<\/p>\n<p>In the broader architecture of the case, Rabbi Yaakov Forchheimer functions as a contested source of legitimacy. His importance lies not in allegations against him or actions he is alleged to have taken, but in the question of whether his respected name was accurately invoked to support one side of a bitter communal conflict. Few secondary figures better illustrate how authority, reputation, and credibility can become central battlegrounds in disputes that extend far beyond the courtroom.<\/p>\n<p>Chaya Rosenzweig is a New Jersey real estate entrepreneur, investor-relations specialist, and founder of Rose Capital Group whose role in the litigation involving Miryam Malachi and Rabbi Avraham Appel places her at the intersection of business competition, communal politics, and reputational warfare. Among all the defendants named in the lawsuit, Rosenzweig is the figure most closely associated with the economic dimension of the dispute. While the public controversy has largely focused on allegations involving Appel, rabbinic interventions, and communal responses, the plaintiff&#8217;s filings portray Rosenzweig as representing a parallel struggle over investors, market share, business influence, and control of valuable commercial relationships within Lakewood&#8217;s growing real estate economy.<\/p>\n<p>Rosenzweig built her professional reputation in the niche world of real estate syndication and investment marketing. Through Rose Capital Group, she has focused on identifying, promoting, and raising capital for commercial and multifamily real estate projects, particularly those connected to the rapidly expanding Orthodox communities of Ocean County, New Jersey. Her business model relies heavily upon relationships with investors in Israel, a market that has become an increasingly important source of capital for Lakewood-area development projects. Over time, Rosenzweig developed a public profile as a successful Orthodox businesswoman, appearing in interviews and discussions regarding entrepreneurship, real estate investing, and the challenges of building a business within a highly relationship-driven marketplace.<\/p>\n<p>The importance of investor confidence within this sector cannot be overstated. Unlike publicly traded securities markets, syndication-based real estate investment often depends upon trust, reputation, and personal credibility. Investors frequently commit substantial sums based on referrals, communal relationships, and confidence in the individual presenting an opportunity. In such an environment, reputation is not merely a social asset but a commercial one. The ability to attract capital often rises or falls on perceptions of integrity, competence, and trustworthiness.<\/p>\n<p>It is within this context that Rosenzweig&#8217;s relationship with Miryam Malachi became significant. According to the complaint, both women operated within overlapping commercial circles and competed for access to many of the same Israeli investors. The plaintiff alleges that tensions between them predated the public controversy surrounding Appel and arose from disagreements concerning investment opportunities, investor relationships, and the performance of certain real estate projects. The filings contend that Malachi investigated developments associated with Rosenzweig and raised concerns regarding some properties and investments being marketed to investors. According to the plaintiff&#8217;s theory of the case, Rosenzweig viewed those activities as a direct threat to her business interests and investor relationships.<\/p>\n<p>The litigation further suggests that the conflict was not entirely new. According to court proceedings, disputes involving Rosenzweig and Malachi had previously surfaced in a rabbinical court setting, commonly referred to as a Beis Din. The existence of earlier proceedings is significant because it supports the plaintiff&#8217;s broader contention that the hostility between the parties developed independently of the allegations against Appel. Under the plaintiff&#8217;s narrative, the controversy involving Appel later became intertwined with an already-existing business rivalry.<\/p>\n<p>Rosenzweig&#8217;s alleged role in the public campaign against Malachi forms the core of the plaintiff&#8217;s claims against her. The complaint portrays her not merely as a supporter of Appel but as one of the principal architects of the effort to discredit Malachi publicly. According to the filings, Rosenzweig participated in gathering information, developing narratives, drafting content, and shaping materials that ultimately appeared on the website created to attack Malachi&#8217;s reputation. The plaintiff specifically attributes portions of the website&#8217;s content to Rosenzweig and alleges that some of the allegations published there echoed claims Rosenzweig had previously advanced in other forums.<\/p>\n<p>The plaintiff also alleges that Rosenzweig&#8217;s involvement extended beyond authorship and into the operational infrastructure supporting the website. Later filings reportedly connect Rosenzweig to domain registration and hosting arrangements through financial records and account information. These allegations remain contested, and no court has yet determined their accuracy. Nevertheless, they form an important part of the plaintiff&#8217;s effort to establish direct participation rather than mere association.<\/p>\n<p>One of the more revealing aspects of the litigation concerns the alleged overlap between the website campaign and the commercial marketplace in which both women operated. According to the complaint, the publication of the website triggered immediate concern among investors connected to projects involving Malachi. The filings identify specific investment vehicles, including Sapphire Investment Group and 15 Beaver Hill, as experiencing demands for capital returns and investor withdrawals following the campaign. The plaintiff alleges that substantial sums were returned to investors and that additional investments became frozen or endangered as a result of the reputational damage she suffered. Whether those losses were caused by the campaign or by other factors remains a matter of dispute, but the allegations illustrate why the economic consequences occupy such a central place in the litigation.<\/p>\n<p>The plaintiff&#8217;s theory ultimately portrays Rosenzweig as the defendant with the clearest independent motive. Unlike Appel, whose alleged motive centers on protecting himself from accusations, or various rabbis whose involvement concerns questions of communal governance and religious authority, Rosenzweig is portrayed as someone whose business interests allegedly benefited from the weakening of a competitor. Under this theory, the controversy surrounding Appel provided an opportunity to damage an individual competing for the same investors, the same relationships, and the same sources of capital.<\/p>\n<p>From a sociological perspective, Rosenzweig&#8217;s role highlights the extent to which economic competition and communal influence overlap in tightly interconnected religious communities. Business relationships, charitable networks, educational institutions, rabbinic authority, and social standing often exist within the same ecosystem. As a result, commercial rivalries can acquire communal dimensions, while communal disputes can produce significant financial consequences. The litigation presents Rosenzweig as a figure operating precisely at that intersection.<\/p>\n<p>At the same time, the allegations against Rosenzweig remain allegations. She and her co-defendants deny wrongdoing, and no court has made findings establishing the truth of the plaintiff&#8217;s claims. The public record presently reflects competing narratives rather than adjudicated facts.<\/p>\n<p>Even so, Rosenzweig occupies a uniquely important place in the story. Rabbi Yosef Rabinowicz represents the alleged effort at communal accountability. Rabbi Henoch Perl represents the alleged process of reintegration and rehabilitation. Rabbi Yaakov Forchheimer represents the struggle over legitimacy and rabbinic authority. Chaya Rosenzweig represents something different: the economic battlefield beneath the controversy. Her significance lies in the allegation that a conflict over reputation became inseparable from a conflict over investors, capital, and market position.<\/p>\n<p>Whether ultimately viewed as a successful entrepreneur defending herself against false accusations or as a business rival accused of weaponizing communal networks against a competitor, Rosenzweig stands as one of the most consequential figures in the litigation. Her role illustrates how disputes that begin with personal allegations can evolve into battles over money, influence, credibility, and control within a closely connected commercial community.<\/p>\n<p>Robert Keleti, sometimes identified in court filings and community materials as Moshe Kelety, is a Lakewood resident, community activist, and businessman whose role in the litigation involving Miryam Malachi and Rabbi Avraham Appel has made him one of the most visible and publicly identifiable figures in the controversy. Unlike the rabbis who appear in the dispute as sources of religious authority or the business figures who allegedly operated behind the scenes, Keleti is portrayed in the plaintiff&#8217;s filings as the principal public-facing operator of the campaign directed against Malachi. If Appel is presented as the alleged beneficiary of the campaign and Chaya Rosenzweig as the figure associated with its commercial motivations, Keleti emerges as the individual who allegedly carried the effort into the streets, onto social media, and into the daily life of the Lakewood community.<\/p>\n<p>Keleti&#8217;s importance in the litigation derives from a combination of personal relationships, physical proximity, and highly visible public conduct. He is the father of Chaya Rosenzweig, founder of Rose Capital Group, and is described in the complaint as a close ally of Appel. According to the plaintiff&#8217;s theory of the case, these relationships placed him at the intersection of the dispute&#8217;s two major dimensions: the allegations involving Appel and the broader business conflict between Rosenzweig and Malachi. The filings portray him as a trusted participant willing to take on public responsibilities while others operated through legal, institutional, or commercial channels.<\/p>\n<p>One of the more unusual aspects of Keleti&#8217;s role is his alleged personal familiarity with Malachi. The complaint states that he lived near her while she resided at the Westgate apartment complex on Green Cove. This proximity became significant because some of the most damaging allegations attributed to Keleti relied explicitly on his claimed observations as a neighbor. Materials associated with the campaign reportedly quoted him as stating that he lived across from Malachi and witnessed a constant flow of men entering and leaving her apartment late at night. According to the plaintiff, these allegations were false and defamatory. Regardless of their accuracy, the claims carried particular force because they were presented not as rumor but as the observations of someone who purportedly lived nearby and possessed firsthand knowledge.<\/p>\n<p>The plaintiff&#8217;s filings suggest that Keleti&#8217;s accusations served a specific function within the campaign. Rather than focusing exclusively on financial or business disputes, they targeted Malachi&#8217;s moral character, personal life, and social standing. In a tightly knit Orthodox community, such allegations can have consequences extending far beyond personal embarrassment. They can affect business relationships, educational opportunities, communal participation, friendships, and family reputation. The complaint alleges that Keleti&#8217;s statements were intended to maximize precisely those consequences.<\/p>\n<p>What distinguishes Keleti from nearly every other figure in the litigation is the extent to which his alleged actions were public and attributable. According to the filings, he was not operating anonymously. The plaintiff alleges that he used his personal Facebook account to publish links directing community members to the website attacking Malachi. Screenshots reproduced in the filings reportedly show posts made under his own name encouraging readers to visit the site and learn more about her. Under the plaintiff&#8217;s account, Keleti was not merely repeating rumors but actively promoting the campaign while attaching his own identity and credibility to its contents.<\/p>\n<p>The filings further portray him as the campaign&#8217;s primary field operator. According to the complaint and supporting exhibits, Keleti personally participated in distributing flyers, signs, and printed materials throughout Lakewood and neighboring communities. These materials allegedly appeared in public locations, on vehicles, and at sites connected to Malachi&#8217;s family. Particularly significant are allegations involving her children&#8217;s school. The plaintiff&#8217;s filings include references to security-camera footage and photographic evidence that allegedly place Keleti at school grounds while campaign materials were being distributed. If proven, such evidence would transform his role from that of a commentator into that of a direct participant in a coordinated public effort.<\/p>\n<p>The existence of photographic and surveillance evidence is important because much of the broader litigation revolves around disputed narratives, private conversations, and competing recollections. By contrast, the allegations involving Keleti concern highly visible actions that are potentially susceptible to direct documentary verification. Whether the evidence ultimately supports the plaintiff&#8217;s account or the defense&#8217;s position, the controversy surrounding Keleti is unusually concrete compared with many other aspects of the case.<\/p>\n<p>Keleti&#8217;s significance extends beyond the specific acts attributed to him. The plaintiff&#8217;s filings portray him as the individual who operationalized a broader campaign allegedly involving multiple participants. Under this theory, Appel provided the underlying motivation, Rosenzweig contributed business-related grievances and strategic content, while Keleti handled public dissemination and community mobilization. In this sense, the complaint presents him as the person who translated private hostility into public action.<\/p>\n<p>His conduct during the early stages of litigation has also attracted attention. According to courtroom accounts referenced in reporting and filings, Keleti appeared in court without legal representation during initial proceedings concerning injunctive relief. He was reportedly questioned regarding his activities and confronted with evidence relating to flyer distribution and website promotion. These accounts depict him as someone willing to defend his actions publicly rather than retreat into anonymity. Whether that ultimately helps or harms his legal position remains to be determined, but it reinforces the broader picture of Keleti as an unusually visible participant in the dispute.<\/p>\n<p>From a sociological perspective, Keleti represents the grassroots dimension of communal conflict. Rabbi Yosef Rabinowicz appears in the record as a figure associated with internal accountability. Rabbi Henoch Perl appears as a figure associated with reintegration and rehabilitation. Chaya Rosenzweig represents commercial rivalry and competition for investors. Keleti represents something different: the mobilization of public opinion. His alleged actions illustrate how reputational campaigns function within close-knit communities where social networks, personal relationships, and local visibility can be as influential as formal institutional decisions.<\/p>\n<p>At the same time, the allegations against him remain contested. Keleti and his co-defendants deny wrongdoing, and no court has yet determined whether the statements attributed to him were false, whether he acted with malice, or whether he participated in any unlawful conspiracy. The public record presently reflects competing claims rather than adjudicated facts.<\/p>\n<p>Nevertheless, among all the defendants in the litigation, Keleti may be the easiest for outsiders to understand. The case contains complex questions involving rabbinic authority, religious governance, arbitration agreements, real estate syndications, and communal politics. Keleti&#8217;s alleged role is more direct and tangible. The plaintiff portrays him as the man who posted the links, distributed the flyers, made the accusations, and carried the campaign into public view. Whether ultimately viewed as a concerned community member warning others about conduct he believed to be true or as a central participant in a coordinated effort to destroy a woman&#8217;s reputation, Robert Keleti stands as the most visible public face of one of the most bitter and consequential disputes to emerge from Lakewood&#8217;s Orthodox community in recent years.<\/p>\n<p>Ian Goldman is a New Jersey attorney and litigation partner at Levin Shea Pfeffer &#038; Goldman, P.A. whose role in the dispute involving Miryam Malachi and Rabbi Avraham Appel marks the point at which a conflict that had unfolded through rabbinic intervention, communal pressure, and reputational warfare entered the formal arena of the New Jersey court system. Unlike most of the major figures associated with the controversy, Goldman is neither a rabbinic authority, business competitor, community activist, nor alleged participant in the underlying events. His significance derives from his position as Appel&#8217;s attorney and from the legal strategies employed to contain, manage, and defend against allegations that evolved into a high-profile civil action.<\/p>\n<p>As a partner at Levin Shea Pfeffer &#038; Goldman, P.A., Goldman practices within the world of commercial litigation and civil disputes. His professional obligations differ fundamentally from those of the other figures who populate the litigation. While rabbis exercise religious authority, businesspeople pursue commercial interests, and community members engage in social advocacy, Goldman operates within a framework governed by legal ethics, procedural rules, evidentiary standards, and client representation. The actions attributed to him throughout the controversy therefore provide insight into the defense&#8217;s legal strategy rather than the underlying factual merits of the allegations themselves.<\/p>\n<p>Goldman&#8217;s appearance in the chronology signals an important transition. Much of the early dispute unfolded through informal community mechanisms. Allegations were presented to rabbis. Interventions were conducted through religious authority. Questions of discipline and communal standing were debated within the Orthodox community. By the time Goldman emerges as a visible figure, the dispute had begun shifting into a formal legal contest involving liability exposure, settlement discussions, evidence preservation, trespass claims, media relations, and eventual litigation.<\/p>\n<p>One of the earliest significant episodes involving Goldman concerns alleged settlement discussions that took place in late 2024. According to the plaintiff&#8217;s certifications, Goldman participated in a meeting with Malachi and her husband during which a proposal was conveyed that would have provided approximately $50,000 to cover future therapy and related expenses in exchange for a release of claims and a confidentiality agreement. The plaintiff characterizes the proposal as an attempt to secure silence regarding the allegations against Appel. The defense would almost certainly view the same discussions as ordinary settlement negotiations, a common feature of disputes involving serious allegations and potential civil liability. No court has ruled on the significance or interpretation of those discussions, but they remain an important part of the chronology because they represent one of the first documented efforts to resolve the controversy outside of formal litigation.<\/p>\n<p>Goldman&#8217;s role became substantially more visible in November 2025 after a series of confrontations involving Yehonatan Richenberg, Malachi&#8217;s husband, and institutions associated with Appel. According to the filings, Richenberg repeatedly appeared at locations connected to Appel, including Kollel Cheshek Shlomo, seeking answers regarding Appel&#8217;s return to teaching. In response, Goldman sent a formal letter dated November 16, 2025 that would become one of the most concrete documents associated with his involvement in the case.<\/p>\n<p>The letter, written on the firm&#8217;s letterhead, functioned as a combined no-contact and no-trespass notice. It identified specific locations associated with Appel and directed Richenberg to cease appearing at those properties. The correspondence further stated that Appel was in possession of video evidence documenting earlier encounters and warned that future incidents could be treated as trespass or harassment, potentially resulting in legal action and contact with law enforcement. The letter illustrates Goldman&#8217;s approach to the dispute: transforming informal confrontations into issues governed by formal legal process. Rather than permitting continued face-to-face encounters, the communication sought to establish enforceable boundaries and create a documented legal record.<\/p>\n<p>The references to video evidence are particularly notable because they reveal a parallel process of evidence gathering occurring on the defense side. Much of the plaintiff&#8217;s case relies upon screenshots, photographs, financial records, text messages, recordings, and other forms of documentation. Goldman&#8217;s letter suggests that Appel and his representatives were likewise collecting surveillance footage and maintaining records of interactions they believed relevant to their defense. In this respect, the dispute evolved into a contest not merely over competing narratives but over competing evidentiary archives.<\/p>\n<p>Goldman has also played a significant role in shaping the defense&#8217;s public messaging. Acting as Appel&#8217;s attorney, he provided statements to the media outlining the core defense theory. In comments reported by the *New York Post*, Goldman rejected the allegations against his client in unequivocal terms. Rather than arguing that the events had been misunderstood or exaggerated, he reportedly asserted that the plaintiff&#8217;s claims were fabricated, that the screenshots and digital evidence were themselves fabricated, and that the controversy constituted part of a broader extortion and smear campaign directed against Appel. He further challenged the identification of Appel in certain photographs submitted as evidence.<\/p>\n<p>These statements are important because they reveal the central battleground likely to dominate discovery and trial. The defense strategy, as publicly articulated by Goldman, focuses heavily on authenticity. If the plaintiff&#8217;s digital evidence can be authenticated, it strengthens her case considerably. If the defense can demonstrate fabrication, manipulation, or misattribution, the entire structure of the plaintiff&#8217;s narrative could be undermined. Goldman&#8217;s public statements therefore serve as an early roadmap to the evidentiary disputes that are likely to shape the litigation.<\/p>\n<p>From a broader perspective, Goldman&#8217;s involvement highlights the migration of authority from one system to another. Earlier stages of the controversy were governed largely by rabbis, communal institutions, schools, investor networks, and social pressure. Goldman&#8217;s appearance marks the increasing dominance of a different set of mechanisms: settlement negotiations, evidentiary authentication, discovery requests, deposition testimony, media strategy, and judicial rulings. The controversy ceased to be solely a communal dispute and became a formal civil case governed by the rules of the New Jersey Superior Court.<\/p>\n<p>This transition makes Goldman a uniquely important figure in understanding the case&#8217;s evolution. Rabbi Yosef Rabinowicz appears in the record as a symbol of communal accountability. Rabbi Henoch Perl appears as a figure associated with reintegration and rehabilitation. Rabbi Yaakov Forchheimer represents the struggle over credibility and the use of rabbinic authority. Chaya Rosenzweig represents alleged commercial rivalry and investor competition. Robert Keleti represents public mobilization and community-level advocacy. Ian Goldman represents something different: legal containment, procedural control, and risk management.<\/p>\n<p>At the same time, it is important to recognize that Goldman is not accused of participating in the underlying alleged misconduct, creating the website, distributing flyers, or making communal decisions. His actions are those of counsel representing a client facing serious allegations. The plaintiff interprets some of those actions as part of a broader effort to suppress or contain damaging information. The defense would characterize them as routine and appropriate legal representation. No court has made findings against Goldman personally.<\/p>\n<p>Even so, his role remains central because he serves as the bridge between the informal world in which the controversy originated and the formal legal system that will ultimately determine its outcome. In a dispute that spans rabbinic authority, communal reputation, real estate competition, social-media campaigns, and allegations of sexual misconduct, Goldman is the figure tasked with translating all of those conflicts into the language of pleadings, evidence, procedure, and law.<\/p>\n<p>Yehonatan &#8220;Yoni&#8221; Richenberg emerged as one of the most consequential non-party figures in the litigation involving Miryam Malachi and Rabbi Avraham Appel. Although he is not a plaintiff in the underlying lawsuit, his actions, certifications, and public role place him at the center of many of the dispute&#8217;s most important developments. As Malachi&#8217;s husband under Jewish law, Richenberg evolved from a supportive family member into a principal witness, advocate, and participant whose conduct repeatedly forced issues that had been handled privately within communal and rabbinic channels into the public sphere. His story illustrates how a controversy that began as an allegation of personal misconduct expanded into a broader conflict involving religious authority, communal accountability, reputational warfare, and formal civil litigation.<\/p>\n<p>Unlike many of the other major figures in the case, Richenberg is neither a rabbi, attorney, business competitor, nor institutional leader. His involvement arises entirely from his relationship with Malachi and his determination to challenge what he believed was a failure by community institutions to adequately address the allegations against Appel. The filings portray him as a deeply invested participant whose actions repeatedly accelerated the movement of the dispute from private conversations into increasingly public confrontations.<\/p>\n<p>One of Richenberg&#8217;s earliest appearances in the chronology concerns alleged settlement discussions that took place before formal litigation commenced. According to the plaintiff&#8217;s certifications, he attended a meeting involving attorney Ian Goldman, counsel for Appel, during which a proposal was conveyed that would have provided approximately $50,000 for future therapy and related expenses in exchange for a release of claims and a confidentiality agreement. The plaintiff&#8217;s side portrays the proposal as an effort to secure silence regarding the allegations against Appel. The defense would likely characterize the same discussions as routine settlement negotiations commonly undertaken in disputes involving serious allegations and potential legal exposure. Regardless of interpretation, the filings present Richenberg as someone who rejected the proposed resolution and instead continued pursuing other avenues of accountability.<\/p>\n<p>His significance increased dramatically in late 2025 after learning that Appel had allegedly resumed teaching despite an earlier rabbinic intervention. According to Richenberg&#8217;s sworn certification, he was disturbed by reports that Appel had returned to a position of authority involving students and sought explanations from those responsible for the decision. This concern prompted a series of visits to institutions associated with Appel, particularly Kollel Cheshek Shlomo, which would become a turning point in the controversy.<\/p>\n<p>Richenberg&#8217;s certification serves as one of the principal documentary sources for understanding this phase of the dispute. Through his sworn statement, he provides much of the public record concerning Appel&#8217;s return to teaching, the responses of school administrators, the role allegedly played by Rabbi Henoch Perl, and the increasingly tense confrontations that followed. In this respect, Richenberg functions not merely as a participant but as one of the primary narrators of the events that transformed the controversy from an internal communal matter into a public legal dispute.<\/p>\n<p>According to his certification, the escalation unfolded over a compressed period in November 2025. Richenberg states that he first went to the school seeking answers regarding Appel&#8217;s return to teaching and was informed that Appel was operating under the guidance of Rabbi Henoch Perl. Unsatisfied with the explanation, he returned on subsequent occasions. The filings allege that the institutional response became progressively more forceful. Security personnel were present, warnings were issued, and the possibility of police involvement was raised. What had begun as an attempt to obtain answers increasingly became a confrontation between an aggrieved family member and institutions determined to maintain order and control access to their facilities.<\/p>\n<p>These events ultimately prompted formal legal intervention. On November 16, 2025, Appel&#8217;s attorney, Ian Goldman, issued a written no-contact and no-trespass letter directed at Richenberg. The correspondence warned him to stay away from locations associated with Appel and indicated that future encounters could result in legal consequences. The letter marked an important transition in the chronology. The dispute was no longer being managed solely through conversations, rabbis, or communal relationships. It had entered the realm of documented legal positioning and potential civil litigation.<\/p>\n<p>Richenberg also occupies a central position in one of the most consequential factual disputes in the entire case. The website created to attack Malachi&#8217;s credibility alleges that Richenberg attempted to extort approximately $48,000 from Appel through text messages. According to the narrative advanced on the website, Richenberg allegedly demanded money and threatened public exposure if payment was not made. The website reportedly included screenshots that it presented as evidence of those communications.<\/p>\n<p>Richenberg has categorically denied the allegation. In a sworn certification submitted under penalty of perjury, he states that he never sent the messages attributed to him and never communicated any demand resembling the one depicted on the website. His position goes beyond a simple denial of improper intent. According to his certification, the communications themselves are fabricated. This distinction makes the controversy particularly significant. The dispute is not over the meaning of a message but over whether the message existed at all in authentic form.<\/p>\n<p>As a result, the alleged extortion messages have become one of the clearest factual fault lines in the litigation. If the messages are authentic, they could substantially support the defense narrative that financial motivations played a role in the controversy. If they are fabricated, they could become powerful evidence supporting the plaintiff&#8217;s claim that a coordinated campaign existed to discredit both Malachi and those associated with her. Because the dispute centers on a specific screenshot, a specific communication, and a direct sworn denial, it is likely to be particularly susceptible to forensic examination and evidentiary scrutiny.<\/p>\n<p>The controversy also appears to have affected Richenberg&#8217;s daily life beyond the courtroom. According to the plaintiff&#8217;s filings, the publication of personal information and the public campaign against the family led to heightened security concerns. The family allegedly invested in surveillance systems and other protective measures after their residence became publicly associated with the controversy. Whether viewed as a necessary response to perceived threats or an overreaction to public criticism, these allegations suggest that the dispute extended well beyond legal filings and into the practical realities of family life.<\/p>\n<p>From a broader analytical perspective, Richenberg occupies a unique position within the cast of characters surrounding the litigation. Rabbi Yosef Rabinowicz appears as a figure associated with communal accountability. Rabbi Henoch Perl appears as a figure associated with rehabilitation and reintegration. Rabbi Yaakov Forchheimer represents contested legitimacy and credibility. Chaya Rosenzweig represents alleged commercial rivalry. Robert Keleti represents public mobilization and community activism. Ian Goldman represents legal containment and procedural strategy. Richenberg represents something different: the family advocate whose persistence repeatedly forced private controversies into public view.<\/p>\n<p>Whether one views his actions as accountability-seeking, confrontational, protective, or provocative, they played a central role in shaping the chronology of the dispute. His refusal of the alleged settlement proposal, his challenges to Appel&#8217;s return to teaching, his confrontations with institutional authorities, his receipt of legal warnings, and his sworn denial of the extortion allegations all became pivotal moments in the evolution of the case.<\/p>\n<p>At the same time, the allegations surrounding Richenberg remain contested. The defense portrays him as a participant in an extortion scheme and as someone whose conduct crossed appropriate boundaries. The plaintiff portrays him as a husband seeking accountability for his wife and protection for his family. No court has yet resolved those competing narratives.<\/p>\n<p>Even so, Richenberg&#8217;s significance within the litigation is unmistakable. He is more than a supporting figure standing beside the plaintiff. He is one of the principal engines driving the chronology of the 2025 phase of the dispute, a witness whose credibility is directly tied to some of the case&#8217;s most important factual questions, and a participant whose actions helped transform an internal communal controversy into a matter of public record and judicial scrutiny.<\/p>\n<p>Kollel Cheshek Shlomo occupies a central place in the litigation involving Miryam Malachi and Rabbi Avraham Appel because it served not only as a religious institution but also as the physical, organizational, and symbolic foundation of Appel&#8217;s authority within the Orthodox community of Lakewood, New Jersey. Throughout the court filings, the seminary appears repeatedly as the location where questions of leadership, accountability, institutional loyalty, and communal legitimacy converged. While the public controversy focuses primarily on allegations against Appel, the dispute repeatedly returns to Kollel Cheshek Shlomo because the institution became the arena in which those allegations were tested against the realities of power, governance, and communal self-preservation.<\/p>\n<p>According to the filings, Kollel Cheshek Shlomo is a religious private school and advanced Torah study institution owned and operated by Appel. Within the Orthodox Jewish world, a kollel is far more than a classroom. It functions as an educational institution, a center of religious authority, a community hub, a fundraising platform, and a source of social prestige. The leader of such an institution often occupies multiple roles simultaneously, serving as educator, counselor, mentor, fundraiser, and communal authority. Consequently, challenges to the leader of a kollel are rarely confined to the individual. They inevitably affect the institution through which that authority is exercised.<\/p>\n<p>The ownership structure alleged in the litigation is significant. The filings do not portray Kollel Cheshek Shlomo as an independent institution evaluating Appel from a distance. Rather, they repeatedly characterize it as Appel&#8217;s own institution. This distinction shapes the entire accountability question at the heart of the dispute. If restrictions were imposed upon Appel, those restrictions necessarily implicated the future of the institution itself. Decisions concerning his ability to teach, counsel, or exercise authority were not merely personnel matters. They affected the operation and identity of the organization he controlled.<\/p>\n<p>The physical reality of the institution reinforces this point. The November 16, 2025 no-trespass letter issued by attorney Ian Goldman identifies 502 and 506 New Egypt Road in Lakewood among the locations from which Yehonatan Richenberg was instructed to stay away. These addresses anchor the controversy to specific parcels of real estate and reveal that Kollel Cheshek Shlomo was treated not simply as an abstract educational enterprise but as a physical asset requiring protection. The legal effort to establish enforceable boundaries around these locations illustrates how the conflict became tied to concrete questions of access, property rights, and institutional control.<\/p>\n<p>The school&#8217;s importance increased dramatically following the alleged rabbinic intervention of 2024. According to the plaintiff&#8217;s filings, Rabbi Yosef Rabinowicz and other rabbis confronted Appel regarding allegations involving Malachi and secured an agreement that Appel would step away from positions of trust and authority. Whether those allegations and admissions are ultimately substantiated remains a matter for the courts and witnesses. What is clear from the litigation is that the question of whether those restrictions remained in force became inseparable from the future of Kollel Cheshek Shlomo.<\/p>\n<p>That conflict erupted into public view in November 2025. According to the sworn certification of Yehonatan Richenberg, he learned that Appel had resumed teaching and returned to Kollel Cheshek Shlomo seeking answers. The certification has become one of the principal sources for understanding this phase of the dispute. Richenberg alleges that school administrators informed him that Appel had returned to teaching under the guidance of Rabbi Henoch Perl. Unsatisfied with that explanation, he returned to the school on multiple occasions over several days.<\/p>\n<p>Those visits transformed the institution from a passive backdrop into an active participant in the chronology of the case. According to the filings, the response hardened with each encounter. Administrators allegedly defended the decision to allow Appel&#8217;s return. Security personnel were present. Warnings were issued. The possibility of police intervention was raised. What had begun as an internal question concerning rabbinic discipline evolved into a confrontation over who possessed the authority to determine the institution&#8217;s future.<\/p>\n<p>The appearance of security personnel is one of the most revealing aspects of the record. Educational and religious institutions are ordinarily designed to facilitate learning, mentorship, and community engagement. By late 2025, however, Kollel Cheshek Shlomo had reportedly become a monitored and protected perimeter. Goldman&#8217;s subsequent no-trespass letter states that Appel&#8217;s side possessed video evidence documenting Richenberg&#8217;s visits on multiple dates. This detail introduces an important symmetry into the broader dispute. Much of the plaintiff&#8217;s case relies on digital evidence, including text messages, photographs, financial records, recordings, and screenshots. The school itself had become a source of digital evidence for the defense, generating surveillance footage and visitor records that could later be deployed in legal proceedings.<\/p>\n<p>In this sense, the institution evolved beyond its educational mission. It became an evidentiary environment. The same building that housed Torah study and religious instruction also functioned as a site where surveillance footage, security protocols, and legal documentation were generated in anticipation of litigation. The controversy transformed the school into an organization operating simultaneously within religious and legal frameworks.<\/p>\n<p>The relationship between Kollel Cheshek Shlomo and other entities associated with Appel further complicates its role. The plaintiff&#8217;s filings repeatedly connect the institution to a broader network that included charitable operations, fundraising activities, and community programs. According to the plaintiff&#8217;s theory of the case, Appel&#8217;s status as an educator, communal leader, and charitable figure helped establish the trust that initially facilitated his relationship with Malachi. The complaint further argues that the prestige associated with his educational and charitable work lent legitimacy to financial assistance that later became the subject of intense dispute. The defense rejects these characterizations, but the allegations underscore how difficult it is to separate the institution from the broader ecosystem of influence surrounding its founder.<\/p>\n<p>The school also became an important symbol during the public relations battle that followed. The filings suggest that Appel&#8217;s supporters viewed the continued operation of Kollel Cheshek Shlomo as evidence that the institution remained stable despite mounting allegations. The plaintiff, by contrast, portrays the school&#8217;s willingness to permit Appel&#8217;s return as evidence that earlier accountability mechanisms had collapsed. Thus, the institution became a visible measure by which each side judged the success or failure of its narrative.<\/p>\n<p>Viewed broadly, Kollel Cheshek Shlomo progressed through three distinct stages during the controversy.<\/p>\n<p>First, it functioned as a source of authority. It provided Appel with students, donors, prestige, and a platform from which to exercise communal influence.<\/p>\n<p>Second, it became a contested institution. Questions emerged regarding whether earlier restrictions remained in force, who possessed the authority to modify them, and whether the institution&#8217;s interests were aligned with accountability or rehabilitation.<\/p>\n<p>Third, it became a defended perimeter. Security personnel, surveillance systems, police warnings, legal notices, and formal boundaries transformed the school into a protected institutional space operating under the shadow of litigation.<\/p>\n<p>This evolution explains why the institution occupies such a prominent place in the court record. Kollel Cheshek Shlomo was not merely where events happened. It was the institution through which authority was exercised, challenged, defended, and ultimately litigated. The struggle over Appel became inseparable from the struggle over the institution itself.<\/p>\n<p>From a sociological perspective, the school serves as a microcosm of the larger conflict. Rabbi Yosef Rabinowicz represents the alleged effort at communal accountability. Rabbi Henoch Perl represents the alleged process of rehabilitation and reintegration. Chaya Rosenzweig represents commercial rivalry and economic interests. Robert Keleti represents public mobilization. Ian Goldman represents legal containment and procedural control. Kollel Cheshek Shlomo represents the institution at the center of all those competing forces.<\/p>\n<p>Whether ultimately viewed as a religious school defending its mission during a period of intense controversy or as a power center struggling with questions of accountability and governance, Kollel Cheshek Shlomo remains one of the most important institutions in the case. The court filings repeatedly return to it because it was the place where allegations, authority, property, surveillance, legal strategy, and communal reputation converged. Few institutions better illustrate how a personal dispute can evolve into a broader struggle over power, legitimacy, and control within a tightly interconnected religious community.<\/p>\n<p>When these type of allegations are made, how does the local orthodox community decide who to side with?<\/p>\n<p>The community does not hold a vote. It reads signals, and the strongest signal is standing.<br \/>\nStanding means how deeply a man sits inside the networks that run the town. Appel employs more than two hundred men, raises millions, builds housing, and holds a place in the donor and rabbinic circles that hold Lakewood together. His fall costs the community jobs, money, a building project, and a name it has paid into. The woman who brought the suit came as an immigrant single mother asking for charity. Her vindication costs the community a respected man and forces a reckoning it would rather avoid. The default tilt runs toward the embedded man before anyone weighs a fact. People know, without saying it, which outcome is cheaper for them.<br \/>\nThen comes rabbinic authority. The community waits to see which rabbonim stand where. A signed letter from a recognized rosh yeshiva or posek can close the question for thousands of people who never read the complaint. If senior figures back the accused, the town follows. If they step back, his support drains in a week. So the verdict is less a judgment than a cascade keyed to a handful of men at the top. Most people take their position from the position of the man above them.<br \/>\nDistrust of secular courts shapes the rest. Going to a civil court against a fellow Jew, rather than to a beis din, reads to many as a breach of its own. It lets the accused cast the accuser as the one who broke faith with the community. The phrase used against the plaintiff here, a danger to klal yisroel, draws its force from exactly that suspicion. It reframes a woman pressing a claim as a woman attacking the Jewish people. The historical root runs deep. For centuries the outside court was the enemy&#8217;s court, and informing carried real danger, so the instinct to keep disputes inside has the weight of survival behind it. That instinct protects the community from hostile outsiders. It also protects men who count on no one talking.<br \/>\nThe community also moves to contain. A scandal is a chillul Hashem, a stain on the name of the institution and the town, and the first response of the people around an accused leader is to make it quiet. That means settlements, pressure, chosen therapists, lawyers, and a careful management of who hears what. The advocacy groups that publicize these cases, ZA&#8217;AKAH among them, exist to break that containment, which tells you how strong the containment runs.<br \/>\nUnderneath all of this sits a reading of credibility that has little to do with evidence. The community reads yichus, marriage, money, and length of belonging. A married man with a family, a beard, a kollel, and decades inside reads as substance. An immigrant single mother who took charity reads as someone who can be painted as unstable, ungrateful, or after money. The same facts land differently depending on who carries them.<br \/>\nInformation control decides the rest. Almost no one reads the filing. They learn the story through WhatsApp, through a website, through what a rabbi said at a tisch. Whoever owns the channel owns the verdict. An alleged smear site and flyers at a school are not side details. They are a fight over the only thing that moves this community, which is the story it hears.<br \/>\nWhat flips it is hard evidence and broken ranks. More complainants coming forward, since a pattern is harder to wave off than one account. Documents that resist denial, like the registration records cited in this suit. A beis din ruling, or a senior rabbi who turns. Standing shields a man right up to the point it stops, and then the collapse runs fast, because the same people who followed the authority down now follow it back up.<br \/>\nNone of this is particular to Lakewood or to Orthodox Jews. Any tight community with strong internal authority and a long memory of hostile outsiders behaves this way. The Catholic Church did. The pattern follows from the structure, not the theology. A community protects its own, and the cost of that protection falls on whoever has the least standing to begin with.<\/p>\n<p>Tipping is key. The trick is to watch the signals that cost the signaler something. Online comments are free, so they tell you nothing. A man moving his money, a rabbi attaching his name, a board member resigning, a kollel scrubbing a website: those cost something, and they move before anyone will say out loud which way he leans.<br \/>\nThe clearest tip toward collapse is a second complainant. One account stays a contest of two people&#8217;s word. A second turns it into a pattern, and a pattern resists the fabrication defense. The advocacy group in this case has already asked others to come forward, so the watch is on whether anyone answers. Silence after that call is itself a reading, and it points the other way.<br \/>\nNext, watch the rabbonim, and watch for the thing that does not happen. In a town like Lakewood a recognized man under attack draws a signed letter of support fast. If the senior names stay quiet, that vacuum is the signal. A letter that never comes says more than any letter that does. The same goes for distancing dressed as procedure: a leave of absence, a co-rosh kollel stepping to the front, his name coming off the campaign, an event quietly cancelled.<br \/>\nThen watch the money, because money is the most honest vote in the community. Donors pause before they speak. A stalled campaign, a board that goes silent, pledges that do not clear: these move ahead of public opinion. Note that the published campaign here shows past its goal, above a million dollars. Read that with care. It might mean the base holds, or it might be money raised before the suit surfaced and not yet withdrawn. The number to watch is the next one, not this one.<br \/>\nA shift in the defense is a tell. A move from &#8220;it did not happen&#8221; to &#8220;it was a business dispute&#8221; or &#8220;it was consensual&#8221; concedes contact and fights over its meaning. Watch whether the lawyers hold the line that the man in the photographs is not Appel, or whether they let it drift. Watch the documents. If the registration records that tie the website to a phone and a credit card survive challenge, the fabrication story gets harder to sell, and people who were waiting start to move.<br \/>\nNow the signs the other way, toward the accused holding. A unified letter from named authorities. A counter-suit for extortion that produces its own evidence and reframes her as the aggressor. A smear that takes, so that the room repeats &#8220;danger to klal yisroel&#8221; without anyone pushing back. The accuser&#8217;s own credibility attacked with material the community finds plausible, a prior dispute, a money motive, an inconsistency. And above all, no second voice. If the call for others goes out and nothing answers, the man tends to hold.<br \/>\nThe asymmetry to keep in mind is timing. Support is loud and early. Collapse is quiet and late. The early noise can sit on top of an erosion already underway, so the official position of the community can stay frozen while the private position has moved. Watch the gap between what people say and what they do, between the public letter and where the checks go, between the tisch talk and the empty seats. That gap is where the tip shows up first.<br \/>\nStanding protects a man until the cost of protecting him passes the cost of dropping him. The tip is the moment enough people privately cross that line. You see it not in the speeches but in the small, expensive withdrawals that come before the speeches change.<\/p>\n<p>The public record here runs mostly through criminal cases involving children, so hold one thing in mind before the pattern. The Appel suit is a civil action brought by an adult woman. Most of the cases that reached a courtroom and left a trail involved minors, and the criminal track moves on different rails from a civil one. With that caveat, four trajectories recur.<br \/>\nThe first is flight. Avrohom Mondrowitz, a Ger Hasid in Brooklyn who presented himself as a rabbi and a psychologist and ran a practice and a school for troubled boys, was indicted in 1985 on sodomy and sex crimes against five minors and fled to Israel in 1984 as New York authorities prepared to arrest him. Advocates put the number of his alleged victims near a hundred. He was never tried. The first extradition request failed because sodomy did not count as an extraditable offense under the treaty, the treaty was amended in 2007, and in January 2010 Israel&#8217;s Supreme Court still refused to send him back. Critics charged that Brooklyn DA Charles Hynes slow-walked the case for two decades to keep the ultra-Orthodox vote. Malka Leifer, the Melbourne case close to your own world, ran the same way and ended differently: she fled to Israel, fought extradition for years, and was sent back and convicted in 2023. Flight sometimes works and sometimes only delays.<br \/>\nThe second is intimidation, then conviction, then a long campaign to undo the conviction. Nechemya Weberman, an unlicensed counselor in the Satmar community, was convicted in December 2012 of 59 counts of sustained sexual abuse of a girl who came to him over three years from the age of twelve. During the trial men were arrested for trying to bribe the girl and her husband to drop the case, and others were accused of photographing her on the witness stand and posting the images online. He drew 103 years. But that number became the community&#8217;s grievance rather than its reckoning. The Satmar bloc worked the system for over a decade, and in January 2026 a Brooklyn judge cut the sentence to eighteen years, with the victim present and objecting. A conviction is not the end. The pressure continues against the sentence for as long as the votes hold.<br \/>\nThe third runs through Lakewood and Ocean County court. Yosef Kolko, a camp counselor and yeshiva teacher, abused an eleven-year-old boy. The father first wanted the matter handled inside the community and asked a senior rabbi to keep Kolko away from children and send him to therapy, then went to prosecutors in 2009. The family was attacked and ostracized for going to the police, one man was charged with witness tampering for pressuring them to drop the charges, and the family was forced to move to the Midwest. The father, a prominent rabbi, lost his job. Kolko pleaded guilty mid-trial, days after a woman and a man came forward to say they too had been victims, and drew thirteen years. He then spent years claiming the community had coerced the plea, an inversion where the abuser borrows the language of communal pressure to walk it back.<br \/>\nThe fourth is the institutional cover-up broken by the press. Baruch Lanner ran regions of NCSY, the Orthodox Union youth group, and teens complained about his abuse to his superiors for years and no action was taken until The Jewish Week published a detailed investigation of three decades of abuse, after which the group dismissed him. He was convicted in 2002. A vocal minority of rabbis attacked the paper and the reporter for lashon hara, the prohibition on spreading damaging speech. The lever was a reporter, not a rabbi, and the institution moved only once it could no longer not move.<br \/>\nAcross the four, the variables that decide the outcome are consistent. A second voice changes everything, as Kolko shows. The press changes everything, as Lanner shows. A prosecutor willing to spend political capital changes everything, and a prosecutor unwilling to spend it lets a Mondrowitz run out the clock. Documentary evidence that resists denial does the rest. The throughline is that the community&#8217;s first instinct is containment, the families who break ranks pay a price whether or not they win, and even a win can be chipped away for years by the same forces that resisted it at the start. The cases that end in a conviction are the ones where the containment failed early, usually because more than one person spoke.<\/p>\n<p>The same standing that buys a woman belief in these situations also raises the price she pays to speak.<br \/>\nA community that runs on trust networks rather than on documents allocates credibility by standing, and a woman&#8217;s standing gets read through observance, dress, speech, marriage, connections, and yichus. The reading happens before anyone hears the substance. A woman who dresses and speaks right draws the benefit of the doubt. A woman who reads as modern, or as a baalas teshuva, or a convert, or an immigrant, or divorced, or dependent on charity, starts behind, and has to overcome a prior the other woman never faces. Reputation does the same work a clean evidentiary record does in a court that has no records.<br \/>\nThe credibility and the freedom to use it run in opposite directions. The woman most likely to be believed, the tznius, well-married, well-connected woman from good yichus, is the woman with the most to lose by speaking. Her family&#8217;s shidduchim, her husband&#8217;s standing, her children&#8217;s schools, all of it sits on the table the moment she goes public. So she tends to stay quiet. The woman least likely to be believed, the modern or marginal one, is freest to speak, because she has already priced herself out of the shidduch market and the social economy that the community uses to discipline her. The contempt and the loss of control come together. That is why so much of the exposure in these cases comes from the margins or from people who have already left. Leaving trades credibility for immunity from leverage.<br \/>\nThe reading is also comparative, not absolute. The community does not weigh her standing alone. It weighs her standing against his. A woman of high yichus accusing a man of lower standing is a different contest from the same woman accusing a rosh kollel who employs two hundred men and raises millions. Her connections help her only up to the point where they exceed the pull of his centrality. Past a certain gap, no amount of modesty or lineage moves the room, because the cost of believing her is the loss of him, and the room counts that cost first. The Appel suit sits near the far end of the mismatch. An immigrant single mother who came for help against a man who anchors a whole network. That gap, more than any fact in the complaint, sets the early tilt.<br \/>\nHigh standing on her side does not only protect her. It can also convert into pressure from her own people to stay silent, because a family with a name to guard often guards the name before it guards the daughter. So the formidable, connected woman gets believed and gets leaned on, by the community and by her own family, to spare everyone the scandal.<br \/>\nThe believability of a woman accusing a powerful man has always tracked her class, her race, her respectability, her connections. Juries read defendants the same way. The frum community uses tznius and yichus where the secular world uses polish and pedigree, and both sort the witness before they weigh the claim. Saying so out loud is the only part that breaks a taboo. The sorting runs everywhere.<\/p>\n<p>If a high-level rav with years of Talmud learning does something graphic and gross akin to what is alleged in this NY Post story, how do they understand and justify it?<br \/>\nPeople, including rabbis, do what they can to satisfy their appetites when they believe they can get away with it.<br \/>\nThe learning does not stop it. Talmud trains analysis, memory, verbal speed, and status competition. It does not train a man against using a desperate woman. Decades in the beis medrash can sit on top of a moral interior that never grew, and the assumption that the lamdan must therefore be good is itself one of the beliefs that shields these men. So the first thing to drop is the expectation that the learning and the conduct cannot live in the same person. They live in the same person often.<br \/>\nThe way they live together is by compartment. The learning occupies the daylight self, the office occupies a sealed room, and the two rarely touch in his mind. He does not walk around feeling like a fraud. He experiences his avodah as real, because it is real, and the conduct happens somewhere the Torah categories never get carried. That is why the alleged register is so crude, the locker-room voice, the line under the photo. A man does not bring the vocabulary of the sugya into that room. He brings appetite and a different self, and the crudeness is the sign that the room runs on its own rules.<br \/>\nThen the trained mind turns from guard into tool. The same skill that finds a heter for a hard case in money or kashrus can build a permission for himself. He redefines the category. He tells himself the act does not meet the technical definition of the forbidden thing, that her status or her conduct changes what it is, that this is not the prohibition the simple man thinks it is. A plain man cannot talk himself past a plain issur. A sharp one constructs the staircase around it. The sophistication is the danger, not the protection.<br \/>\nYears of paskening for others feed a second move. A man who decides for everyone else what is permitted can come to locate the law in himself. If he allows it, it is allowed. His sense of how much he carries for klal Yisroel becomes a standing exemption in his own head. The rules bind ordinary men. He carries the load, so he draws latitude. The judge comes to believe he sits above the thing he judges.<br \/>\nHe also rewrites the woman. She pursued him, she wanted it, she is troubled, she is a nisayon sent to test him. The charity he gave gets re-narrated from exploitation into generosity she now repays with a knife. This is where the smear comes from, and not only as tactics. Branding her a danger to klal Yisroel confirms his story to himself. The threat is her. He is the one under attack. And the cover-up gets a halo. Exposure would destroy the Torah he built and the families he feeds, so silencing her becomes the defense of something holy rather than the defense of himself. A man who scripts a woman&#8217;s therapy sessions can tell himself he is helping her.<br \/>\nTheology hands him an exit on top of all this. If teshuva is always open and his merits are vast, the sin turns into a debit in a ledger he trusts will balance. He can do it on Monday and learn with fire on Tuesday, because the account never closes. The greatness and the fall coexist as a story he has heard about great men before.<br \/>\nThe support structure does the rest. He sits where money, deference, and access all flow toward him, where he decides who gets a stipend and who gets a home, where no one tells him no. A man who stops hearing no from the world stops hearing it inside.<br \/>\nI cannot read this man&#8217;s mind, and the allegations are denied and unproven, so take the above as the shape of the general case, not a verdict on him. And not every offender does this interior work. Some know exactly what they are, feel the guilt, and act anyway. Some are closer to ordinary predators wearing the costume, and the learning is the costume. The compartment is not airtight for everyone.<br \/>\nThe hard finish is the one your earlier question already pointed at. The community, and the man himself, lean on the belief that the learning guarantees the character. It does not. The learning gives him the tools to evade and the cover to keep evading, and the more impressive the learning, the better the cover.<\/p>\n<p>I know rabbis criminally convicted of embarrassing sex crimes who can&#8217;t stop themselves from teaching Torah, even in mundane conversations. Why? Because teaching Torah is the last wall of the self still standing.<br \/>\nStrip the title, the shul, the kavod, the freedom, and the one identity that survives the conviction is the man who knows and gives over. He built his whole worth on the teacher&#8217;s chair. He has nothing else to be. So in a mundane conversation the vort comes out, because it is the one role left that still tells him he is someone. Each small piece of Torah is a quiet claim. I am still that man. The crime did not erase the scholar.<br \/>\nPart of it runs on rails. Decades of learning make Torah his native speech. He thinks in sugyos and reaches for a vort the way another man reaches for a story about his kids. The crime never touched the wiring, so even in small talk the Torah comes out, because that is how his mind moves.<br \/>\nThe teaching also restores the old order in the room for a second. Giving Torah puts him back in the higher seat, above the listener, the source rather than the receiver. For a disgraced man that small reassertion of the hierarchy he lost is balm. Every time someone takes his Torah, the verdict that he is below and contemptible gets overturned for a moment. The generosity is a status move wearing the clothes of a gift.<br \/>\nThen it holds the compartment wall in place. The scholar-self and the conduct lived in separate rooms, and the teaching is the proof he keeps offering himself that the scholar is the real man and the crime was the sealed room. As long as he is giving over Torah, the crime stays an episode and not an identity. Stop teaching and the wall cracks, and the crime has to be folded into who he is. He cannot afford that, so he cannot stop.<br \/>\nThe Torah in his mouth never turns on him, which is why it stays comfortable to hold. It became a tool of evasion before the crime and it stays one after. He can hold forth on the holiness of speech while having sent the texts, because the Torah he handles has been cut loose from any application to himself. Teaching it costs him no reckoning. It only flatters him.<br \/>\nThe compulsion is real, and it shares a root with the crime. The man who could not stop himself in the office cannot sit in a room as an equal and let the floor belong to someone else. The grandiosity that told him he stood above the law is the same grandiosity that needs an audience and cannot tolerate being one man among others. The predation and the compulsive teaching grow from one stem, a self that has to hold the room and cannot rest as ordinary.<br \/>\nThe community feeds it. The reverence for the words is strong enough that the speaker gets a pass when the vort is good. People still nod, still thank him, still defer to the Torah even from a convicted source. He learns that the one currency accepted everywhere, even from a man like him, is Torah, so he keeps spending it, because it still buys a flicker of the old standing.<br \/>\nFor some of these men it is not a scheme. It is a wrecked life clinging to the one clean thing left in it, and the teaching is the only hour of the day they feel like the person they meant to be. That is sad rather than sinister. Both can be true in the same man, in the same shiur, on the same afternoon.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The New York Post says: A prominent New Jersey rabbi sexually assaulted a single mom \u2014 and even sent her a pic of his genitals, admitting, \u201cNot great. 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Married Rabbi Avraham Appel \u2014 who runs an elite rabbinical seminary in the tight-knit","twitter:creator":"@lukeford","twitter:image":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/lukesanta.jpg"},"aioseo_meta_data":{"post_id":"193558","title":null,"description":null,"keywords":null,"keyphrases":{"focus":{"keyphrase":"","score":0,"analysis":{"keyphraseInTitle":{"score":0,"maxScore":9,"error":1}}},"additional":[]},"primary_term":null,"canonical_url":null,"og_title":null,"og_description":null,"og_object_type":"default","og_image_type":"default","og_image_url":null,"og_image_width":null,"og_image_height":null,"og_image_custom_url":null,"og_image_custom_fields":null,"og_video":"","og_custom_url":null,"og_article_section":null,"og_article_tags":null,"twitter_use_og":false,"twitter_card":"default","twitter_image_type":"default","twitter_image_url":null,"twitter_image_custom_url":null,"twitter_image_custom_fields":null,"twitter_title":null,"twitter_description":null,"schema":{"blockGraphs":[],"customGraphs":[],"default":{"data":{"Article":[],"Course":[],"Dataset":[],"FAQPage":[],"Movie":[],"Person":[],"Product":[],"ProductReview":[],"Car":[],"Recipe":[],"Service":[],"SoftwareApplication":[],"WebPage":[]},"graphName":"BlogPosting","isEnabled":true},"graphs":[]},"schema_type":"default","schema_type_options":null,"pillar_content":false,"robots_default":true,"robots_noindex":false,"robots_noarchive":false,"robots_nosnippet":false,"robots_nofollow":false,"robots_noimageindex":false,"robots_noodp":false,"robots_notranslate":false,"robots_max_snippet":"-1","robots_max_videopreview":"-1","robots_max_imagepreview":"large","priority":null,"frequency":"default","local_seo":null,"breadcrumb_settings":null,"limit_modified_date":false,"ai":{"faqs":[],"keyPoints":[],"schemas":[],"titles":[],"descriptions":[],"socialPosts":{"email":[],"linkedin":[],"twitter":[],"facebook":[],"instagram":[]}},"created":"2026-06-17 01:26:08","updated":"2026-06-17 03:58:09","seo_analyzer_scan_date":null},"aioseo_breadcrumb":"<div class=\"aioseo-breadcrumbs\"><span class=\"aioseo-breadcrumb\">\n\t\t\t<a href=\"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\" title=\"Home\">Home<\/a>\n\t\t<\/span><span class=\"aioseo-breadcrumb-separator\">&raquo;<\/span><span class=\"aioseo-breadcrumb\">\n\t\t\t<a href=\"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?cat=18\" title=\"Orthodoxy\">Orthodoxy<\/a>\n\t\t<\/span><span class=\"aioseo-breadcrumb-separator\">&raquo;<\/span><span class=\"aioseo-breadcrumb\">\n\t\t\tNY Post: \u2018Prominent NJ rabbi allegedly sent graphic pic, according to explosive sex-assault suit: \u2018Not great. 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