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Two officers were responsible for the massacre. One of them, Shmuel Lahis, was brought to justice in an Israeli military court where he was given a seven year sentence later reduced on appeal to one year. He received an amnesty in 1950, and a later presidential amnesty in 1955. He became a lawyer, and later Secretary General of the Jewish Agency (after its rebirth in 1971).
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At the time of Lahis' nomination to head the Jewish Agency, a former officer of the Carmeli Brigade, Dov Yirmiya, wrote to the Jewish Agency Chairman about Lahis' role in the 1948 massacre. After Lahis' appointment in the role, the controversy was reported in the Israeli media and caused debate in the Knesset. Yirmiya's letter was later published in the newspaper Al Hamishmar.
Eye witness account
The Jewish Agency's response to Yirmiya's letter said that Lahis' past had been known to the Agency since 1961. It also revealed that when Lahis had applied to be registered as a lawyer in 1955 the matter had been examined by the Israeli Legal Council. It was decided that the act which was the reason for Lahis' trial at the military courts was "not an act that carries with it a stigma".See also
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