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The verdict "was a big relief," said Chana Kalmenson, the old- er sister of Nachum Sosonkin, who was seriously injured when Mr. Baz opened fire on a van full of LubaVitch teens traveling across the Brooklyn Bridge on March 1. "We're not getting back what we lost, and we don't have the death penalty in New York, but at least we're getting as much as we can," she said. Next to Halberstam, the 16- year-old who was killed by Mr. Baz's bullets, Sosonkin, 18, was the most seriously wounded in the attack. He still has a 9-mm bullet lodged in his brain and is undergoing medical tests related to his brain damage. After the verdict was an- nounced Dec. 1, Mr. Halberstam's father, Rabbi David Halberstam, told New York Newsday that Mr. Baz "has no remorse. His only re- morse is that he didn't kill every boy on that van." Mr. Baz, a Lebanese immi- grant who has said he was trau- matized by his war-torn childhood, could face up to 146 years in prison when he is sen- tenced on Jan. 18. Mr. Baz, 28, showed no emo- tion in court as the verdicts were read. He was also convicted of weapons possession charges in the shooting of the van full of Lubavitch boys. The boys had been returning to Brooklyn after taking part in a prayer vigil for the late Lubav- itcher rebbe, Menachem Schneer- son, who had just undergone eye surgery in a Manhattan hospital. Two Jordanian men, charged with hindering prosecution and with weapons possession, will be tried separately next year. According to Rabbi Shea Hecht, a cousin of Ari Halber- stam's mother, the guilty verdict brought "a tremendous sigh of re- lief and a tremendous thanks to God" in the Lubavitch communi- ty. 'We hope that the judge will be very, very strict. Baz was suc- cessful in killing one, but his in- tention was to kill 15, and we hope the judge is as strict with all 15 counts" as he is with the mur- der conviction, said Rabbi Hecht, who is also chairman of the board of the Crown Heights-based Na- tional Committee for the Fur- therance of Jewish Education. In other parts of the Jewish community, the verdict was met with similar reaction. "Let this be a message that bias crimes and acts of violence motivated by racism and anti- Semitism will not be tolerated and will meet with swift and harsh punishment," said Anita Sher, director of the New York re- gional office of the Anti-Defama- tion League. "The decision unfortunately will not bring back Ari Halber- stam, but we hope that it pro- vides a small degree of peace and consolation to his parents and the community," she said. Meanwhile, Mr. Sosonkin is slowly recovering from his wounds. He was recently released from a Philadelphia rehabilita- tion hospital and now lives with his sister's family in the Crown Heights section of Brooklyn, where the Lubavitch movement is headquartered. The Israeli-born youth's par- ents reside in Israel. Ms. Kalmenson, who has five children under the age of 8, takes her brother to his doctors and therapy appointments several times a week, helps him with his thrice-daily exercises and with his eating. Mr. Sosonkin still cannot swal- low and must be tube-fed. Be- cause his balance is also still affected by the injury, he cannot be left alone. "We have our hands full, but we thank God for all his miracles and hope for more," said the 28- year-old Ms. Kalmenson. U.S. Top Gun Scouts Israel Jerusalem (JTA) — Gen. John Shalikashvili, the chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, ar- rived in Israel for talks with Is- raeli army officers about possible security arrangements should Is- rael and Syria reach a peace agreement. Gen. Shalikashvili, who was the guest of the outgoing Israel Defense Force chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Ehud Barak, told Israel Television after he arrived that "the purpose of my trip is to learn as much as I can to understand Israel better." He and Lt. Gen. Barak met to discuss security arrangements in the Golan Heights — including the possible deployment of Amer- ican forces as part of a peace- keeping mission there — that would go into effect if Israel with- draws from the area •