Lawyer Tried To Warn Prison Before Client's Israeli Shootout

This version of Lawyer Tried Warn Prison Clients Israeli Shootout N37346 - Breaking News | NBC News Clone was adapted by NBC News Clone to help readers digest key facts more efficiently.

<p>Lawyer was told her client could "pray to God" if he was having trouble when she tired to alert the prison that he was in a dangerous state of mind.</p>
Image: Samuel Sheinbein in an Israeli court
Samuel Sheinbein sits in an Israeli court in this October 24, 1999 file photo. Reuters, file

The lawyer for an American killer who died in a shootout with Israeli special forces Sunday said when she tried to alert authorities about his state of mind, she was told he could “pray to God.”

Samuel Sheinbein, an American serving time in Israel for a 1997 Maryland murder, was killed by special forces after he shot several guards with a stolen gun and barricaded himself inside his prison compound, police said.

Sheinbein’s lawyer, Orit Hayoun, told NBC News that she had received a disturbing phone call from him about an hour before the shooting started.

“He said he was calling to say goodbye,” said Hayoun. “He asked me to make arrangements for after his death. I was very worried. He was very intelligent, and not the type of person to say things and not do them.”

After the call, she tried to alert the prison authorities to her client's state of mind. But despite repeated calls, nobody picked up, Hayoun said. Eventually she said she got through to a prison liaison officer who told her, “If your boy’s in trouble, he can pray to God.”

An Israeli Prison Authority spokesperson said that Hayoun’s calls were received while the shooting was going on.

Two of the guards were seriously wounded, police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld told the Associated Press.

Sheinbein was two-thirds of the way through his 24-year sentence imposed by an Israeli court for the gruesome 1997 murder and dismemberment 19-year-old Alfredo Enrique Tello Jr. in Aspen Hill, Md.

He was just 17 years old at the time of the crime, but with the help of his father he managed to escape to Israel, where a law, changed as a result of his case, prohibited his extradition.

Hayoun said her client’s good behavior had won him a place on the prison furlough program, but she believed he was being pressured by prison gangs to smuggle in contraband.

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