Yosef Shapira (judge)

For the Israeli minister, one of the leaders of the National Religious Party and Bnei Akiva, see Yosef Shapira.

Yosef Shapira (Hebrew: יוסף שפירא; born 5 July 1945) is the State Comptroller of Israel, taking office on 4 July 2012.

Shapira was born in Jerusalem. He earned a law degree at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 1971 and in 1972 was ordained as a lawyer. As part of his reserve duty, he served as a judge at the IDF's Military Court of Appeals, as a colonel. In 2000 he received a Master's degree in criminology from the University of Leicester in England. Between 2001-2003 he was Vice Chairman of the National Disciplinary Tribunal of the Israeli Bar Association. In July 2003 he was appointed a judge of HaShalom courts in the District of Jerusalem. In May 2005 he was appointed a judge of the District Court of Jerusalem.[1] Among his most notable rulings one may find: the opening of the Karta parking lot for businesses on Shabbat, the 2007 ruling in favor of an appointment of an Arab director for the JNF,[2] and his 2008 ruling against the dismantling of Hamas in Jerusalem.[3]

Shapira is married and a father of three.[4]

References

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