RENOVATION AND REMODELING OPPORTUNITY Her main concern, she re- peatedly stresses, is her hus- band. "He's been in isolation for four years," she says. "How can any man .. ." she leaves the thought unfinished. "For what reason? ,Marion is designed for inmates who had behavior problems while in prison. Why is he there?" Bernard Henderson, who has written a book on the sub- ject, Pollard, the Spy's Story: An American Dreyfus Affair?" says it is against the law to give classified information to a foreign government that damages U.S. security with intent to damage security. Jonathan Pollard, he claims, did not do that. He claims all past cases of people who have given classified information to an alley have not even been prosecuted. "Pollard," he says, "is the only one." Both Anne and her father say they believe there is some anti- Semitism behind their case. There are other questions Anne would like answered. "Why was I locked in a ward by myself in an all-male prison for five months? Why am I put on 24-hour watch? The only people who get that are potential suicides . ." "At first I was advised to keep quiet. It was the worst advice in the world." Why was her September tele- phone conversation with her husband disrupted by loud sounds and cut off after only a few minutes? Why is she not permitted to see doctors who know something about her disease, she wants to know. (Her lawsuit against the Bureau of Prisons for charg- ing medical mistreatment is now on appeal.) "Don't you understand what they're trying to do?" she asks. "They're trying to break me." Anne looks upset when ask- ed for more specific examples of medical mistreatment and leaves the room to get a pack of cigarettes. She returns more composed. "The primary point I want to bring out is I want to see justice for my husband and I," she says. "We've never had a court trial. We've never been tried by a jury of our peers. We've been slandered left and right and have never had a chance to rebut . . . I keep be- ing branded and labeled as something I'm not." She doesn't want a pardon, she says. She wants "vindica- tion?' She says she believes her husband was framed. Pollard claims she was coerced into signing a plea bargain by the prosecuting at- torneys, her lawyers and her father. "I didn't want to sign. I wanted a trial," she says. She claims both she and Jonathan were told that the other would suffer if they didn't sign. "I was told by the prosecutors they would hang my husband unless we agreed to sign this plea bargain. Signing it was the biggest mistake of my life .. . "My husband did not com- mit the crime that he was forced to plea to." Her father says, "The gover- ment promised them leniency if they signed the plea bargain and waived their right to a trial. The govern- ment double-crossed them." Pollard hesitates when asked if she feels abandoned by Israel. "The people of Israel have been tremend- ously supportive?' she says, but adds, "No Israeli official has ever bothered to tele- phone me .. . "We are political prisoners?' Pollard states. "I have great faith and believe strongly there is a justice system in this country. I believe justice will be done in this case .. . what's happened to us is outrageous . . . I want a Con- gressional investigation of what's happened in our case "There are two routes now," she says, "The justice system and the alleviation of Jonathan's suffering immed- iately through political in- tervention." Pollard says she is optimis- tic. She looks forward to going back to PR work and to work- ing to have her husband freed when she gets out of jail. She will live in New York, she says, and fly to Marion as often as she can. "I am very proud to be his wife," she says of Jonathan Pollard, "Very proud:' She says she believes he committed no crime. If and when her husband is released, Pollard says they plan on making aliyah. She stresses their love of the U.S. but says ' they've always talked about living in Israel. Because of her experience of the past four years, Pollard says she wants to pursue a degree in international law. More than anything, she says, Franklin Club Retirement Community Construction Reduction During the awkward phases of scheduled major construction, 2 full-sized indepen- dent apartments will be available at a significantly reduced price of $500.00 per month including utilities, van service, social activities and emergency response system. This is a limited time offer and ap- plies to new tenants only on an annual lease. 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