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Tag: Daniel Perez

  • ‘I screamed in pain’: Former hostage Matan Angrest says Hamas terrorists electrocuted him – N12

    Former Gaza hostage Matan Angrest told Channel 12’s ‘Uvda’ about his captivity, including Hamas torture, the loss of his tank crew, bonding with fellow hostage Gali Berman, and his eventual release.

    Content warning: This article contains disturbing imagery, including torture and abuse.

    Former Gaza hostage Matan Angrest told Channel 12’s ‘Uvda’ that he was tortured, including by electrocution, during his time in Hamas’s terror captivity, in an interview broadcast on Thursday evening.

    Angrest, who was serving in a specialized tank unit with classified equipment under the 7th Armored Brigade near Nahal Oz during the October 7 massacre, was the only member of his tank crew who survived the terror attack. His crewmates, Capt. Daniel Perez, St.-Sgt. Itay Chen, and Sgt. Tomer Leibovitz, were all murdered, with their remains taken by terrorists into the Gaza Strip.

    Things that fall under ‘die and don’t tell’ during torture, interrogations

    “I woke up in Gaza in some house, and could not open my eyes or move my hand – my hand was burned,” Angrest said, describing the first moments he recalls following the massacre.

    “I opened my eyes, and eight people were sitting in front of me. They started asking things like ‘Where were you kidnapped from? Where do you serve [in the IDF]?’ but they talked to me in Arabic, and I could not understand,” he continued.

    “Someone came to me with two wires and put them on my wounds. I felt like I was being electrocuted. I screamed in pain, and then he did it to me again,” he told the interviewer.

    According to the report, the terrorists already knew that Angrest was part of a tank crew containing classified systems equipment, and knew that he, as the only survivor, would be able to tell them information that could help future terror acts succeed.

    “In the really hard interrogations, they kept asking things that were classified. Things like ‘Can the driver kill? Does he have a weapon?’ and I kept telling them that the driver is like a regular driver,” he said.

    Angrest’s ability to move improved over time, but Hamas terrorists kept increasing the pressure. “They tortured me to the extreme. Electric shocks – trauma that will stay with me. The longest interrogation was about eight hours continuously, where they made me tell things in the ‘die and don’t tell’ category,” he recalled.

    Angrest also noted that he found out via terrorist radio chatter that his three tank crewmates were murdered on October 7. “I locked myself in a room alone [after finding out], you understand that it’s over. I just thought about them and all of our experiences.”

    Angrest recounts meeting Gali Berman, no longer being alone

    Angrest was held alone for weeks, in locations both above ground and within the underground terror tunnels, Channel 12 noted.

    Then, he was joined by fellow hostage Gali Berman. “I was with Gali for a long time, and connected with him a lot,” he recalled.

    But he was separated from the other hostages and continued to be interrogated. “I would say to Gali: ‘I’m scared. I don’t know what they’ll do to me. How will I sleep at night?’”

    “He tried to comfort me, [but I knew that] if they find out more things about me, it’ll be the end for me,” Angrest added.

    Angrest recalls Oct. 7 massacre

    During the interview, Angrest recalled how, during the massacre, he jumped into his tank and saw a white Toyota with a green-white license plate. “I rubbed my eyes. How did it get in? Suddenly, we heard gunshots, and asked ourselves, ‘Did they infiltrate into the country?’”

    Perez commanded his tank to mobilize out of the Nahal Oz outpost, running over terrorists moving towards it, moving towards a firing position overlooking Shejaia. “Not long after, we were told over the radio to return to the outpost, as there was an incident. I passed by the place where I sleep – where I played backgammon with Tomer (Leibovitz) the day before,” he recalled.

    He noted coming across the scene of the fight between terrorists and Golani Brigade company commander, Maj. Shilo Har-Even and his five soldiers, who were all massacred at the outpost. Perez told the tank crew to “shut off their emotions,” Angrest said.

    “‘Our goal is that there will be no kidnapping,’ I don’t know how he said that – how he predicted the future,” Angrest added, citing what Perez said to the crew at the time.

    “Matan, you need to be sharp. They’ll try to take whoever is in the operations room and kidnap them,” Perez warned, according to Angrest.

    Angrest then noted how just after 8:30 a.m., the tank returned to the breached border fence and discovered another wave of terrorist infiltrators.

    “I told Perez, ‘Look, they’re entering the country, they’re coming towards us,” he told the interviewer.

    They were faced with a dilemma of whether to risk the tank to the possibility of anti-tank missile fire by closing in, or attempting, and likely failing, to stop the wave of infiltrators with long-distance fire, he noted.

    Angrest, the tank’s driver, was instructed by Perez to “reverse quickly” and towards the terrorists.

    “As a team, we began to understand, it’s either them or us. After the shell Itay [Chen] fired, I could see terrorists flying into the air from the blast, 50 meters away from me. While I was seeing this, I continued driving, thinking, ‘How do I destroy them all? it’s… an insane amount. I knew that things could end for us at any moment,” he recounted.

    Angrest still struggles to recall everything that happened, but black box recordings fill in some gaps, Channel 12 noted. The last few moments of the recordings included someone crying, “Did someone get hit? Perez! Perez! Perez!”

    Angrest recalls finding out he was being released

    Angrest was released from captivity in October of 2025, after 738 days of being held by Hamas terrorists within the Gaza Strip.

    It came as a surprise, he said. “They took Gili [Berman] and me somewhere while blindfolded. They removed them, and suddenly we saw [fellow hostages] Alon Ohel and Guy Gilboa-Dalal.”

    “One of the senior terrorists pointed at us and said, ‘You four – you leave tomorrow. Life changed [after being released]. You wake up in the morning and look for the next step. For everyone, it seems like the struggle is over, and you go back to living normally. It goes from zero to one hundred in some ways, but in others from one hundred to zero. The scars will always remain,” he said.

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  • Daniel Perez rattled Tallahassee. What will he do in year two as House Speaker?

    Florida House Speaker Daniel Perez, R-Miami, leaves after speaking with the media during the first day of the legislative session at the Florida State Capitol on Tuesday, March 4, 2025, in Tallahassee, Fla.

    Florida House Speaker Daniel Perez, R-Miami, leaves after speaking with the media during the first day of the legislative session at the Florida State Capitol on Tuesday, March 4, 2025, in Tallahassee, Fla.

    mocner@miamiherald.com

    In his first year as Florida’s young and powerful speaker of the House, Miami Republican Daniel Perez created a new political dynamic in the Sunshine State, in which legislators began to claw back the power they had ceded for so long to Gov. Ron DeSantis and reassert their control over policy and the purse.

    Lawmakers in the Florida House launched explosive inquiries into the DeSantis administration’s spending and decisions. They spearheaded the first ever override of DeSantis’ vetoes. And, working with the Senate, they largely bucked his agenda, letting some of his priorities languish.

    But that was last year. Heading into Perez’s second and final session in charge of Republicans’ agenda in the House, the dynamic has changed, and Perez may be the odd man out.

    Perez, 38, says his relationship with the governor — who he says isn’t returning his calls — remains icy. And he doesn’t seem optimistic about his once-warm relationship with Senate President Ben Albritton following a blowup last year over taxes and spending that appeared to push the leader of the Legislature’s upper chamber closer to the governor.

    With Florida’s legislative session beginning Tuesday, that evolving power dynamic is a wildcard that could affect the state’s ability to lock in more than $100 billion in spending, address the pressing problems facing Floridians and set in stone some of the GOP’s priorities, like drawing new congressional districts and cutting property taxes.

    More than a dozen interviews with Republican members of the Legislature and players in the political process revealed just how fraught the relationship between the House speaker and Senate president remains — though both say they are looking forward.

    “It doesn’t have to be a tough environment,” Perez told the Herald/Times this week in an interview. “It’s just a matter of having a willing and able partner, which, right now, doesn’t seem like something that’s feasible.”

    The governor’s office didn’t respond to a request for comment.

    Florida House Speaker Daniel Perez, R-Miami, hands Florida Senate President Ben Albritton, R-Wauchula, the gavel during the first day of the legislative session at the Florida State Capitol on Tuesday, March 4, 2025, in Tallahassee, Fla.
    Florida House Speaker Daniel Perez, R-Miami, hands Florida Senate President Ben Albritton, R-Wauchula, the gavel during the first day of the legislative session at the Florida State Capitol on Tuesday, March 4, 2025, in Tallahassee, Fla. Photo by Matias J. Ocner mocner@miamiherald.com

    Priorities and Politics

    Just like last year, Perez, a lawyer by trade, is playing his cards close to the vest.

    He has no legacy bill that he is shepherding through the process. He says he believes the state has put the necessary changes in place to fix Florida’s property insurance crisis. And he has resisted calls from cash-strapped condo owners to overhaul the building-safety law he championed after the fall of the Champlain Towers South in Surfside.

    His main goal, he says, is to pass a conservative budget that is smaller than last year’s, potentially setting up another difficult negotiation with the Senate, which is concerned with revenue shortfalls.

    “This will be the first time that there will be a back-to-back cut in the budget coming out of the House since the recession,” Perez said. “And we’re proud to voluntarily take that task on.”

    It’s hard to discern what measures Perez personally wants to pass. He isn’t sharing his preferences. And while he is addressing the governor’s priorities of redistricting and reducing property taxes, both issues have succumbed to the committee process with multiple proposals and much debate.

    “We’re looking forward to that proposal if he were to ever have one,” Perez said of DeSantis’ desire to do away with property taxes for Florida residents with homestead exemptions on their primary residences. “And then I’m sure the Senate will soon thereafter follow his lead, so we’ll have that conversation at the right time.”

    Just a year ago, the House and Senate appeared to be in lockstep, with DeSantis suddenly struggling to bend the Florida Legislature to his will.

    That was clear before Florida’s regular 2025 legislative session. When DeSantis called for a special session on immigration, they called their own and passed legislation that they championed and he panned. Those battle lines appeared to persist when the House and Senate announced a plan for a state budget that would include billions in tax relief.

    “I’m pleased to share with you that we have reached a framework for a budget plan,” Albritton said on the Senate floor on May 2. “As part of our agreement with the House, we will take up the most historic tax relief package in the history of our state.”

    But Albritton says his Senate colleagues balked when it came time to whip votes on Perez’s specific plan to cut $5 billion from Florida’s sales tax as the policy was publicly denounced by the governor. He called Perez several days later and told him the Senate didn’t go for it.

    “I can’t make the Senate do anything,” Albritton told the Herald/Times about the outcome.

    Perez sent out a memo lamenting how the deal had been “blown up,” threatening a government shutdown as lawmakers approached the next fiscal year without a budget.

    “The House and Senate had a deal on the budget,” Rep. Juan Carlos Porras, a Miami Republican, recounted to the Herald/Times this week. “And then over the weekend, the Senate president reneged on that deal, and that resulted in the numerous days that we didn’t have a budget.”

    Ed Hooper, the Senate budget chairman from Clearwater, remembers it differently. The Senate was preparing a state budget for less economic growth in the future as fewer people retire in Florida, he said, and Perez didn’t give them heads up about the House’s planned tax cut.

    “That was a $5 billion surprise,” Hooper said. “There was no deal agreed on a sales tax reduction.”

    The dispute kept lawmakers for months from passing a timely budget, leading ultimately to a deal in June that required two extensions of Florida’s legislative session. In the fallout, the close relationship between Perez and Albritton frayed.

    Albritton told the Herald/Times in an interview on Thursday that he was focused on the future, not the past.

    “I do not have disdain for the speaker,” said Albritton, a Wauchula Republican.

    A policy Albritton cares about will be an early test for that resolve.

    Next week, the Senate will pass the president’s Rural Renaissance package. It is supposed to drive economic growth in sparsely populated regions of the state—an affordability agenda that could be a powerful message during the midterm elections centered on high costs of living.

    Perez killed the bill last year as part of the budget blow up. He’s likely to do it again.

    Herald/Times Tallahassee Bureau reporter Garrett Shanley contributed to this story.

    Alexandra Glorioso

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