Davidson, Adin
Son of is white and Elijah. Adin was born on March 12, 1947, in Tel Aviv, where he spent his childhood in 1964. He served in the Tel Aviv District Court in 1964. He joined the police in 1972 And served in the forensics laboratory, which was then involved in an analysis of sabotage incidents. During the first years of the lab’s establishment, the laboratory was still dealing with the technological progress that had taken place in the structure of the explosive devices and with unusual events that had not been known until then, such as the attack at the Savoy Hotel. These events demonstrated to Command and Gentle the need to establish a body that will provide answers to the problems that arose and will have the appropriate capacity. In order to fulfill this need, the sabotage laboratory was established, one of which was the provision of field services at the site. He was one of the founders of the sabotage laboratory and of the combat doctrine and working methods of the police sabotage system. He has also been involved in research and analysis of explosives and has established connections with police sappers worldwide. In 1977, the sabotage laboratory, while still in its head, became part of the overall sabotage system in the police. During his service, Adin studied law at Tel Aviv University, and he was a courageous man who volunteered for every mission and mission, careful and punctual, industrious and with gold hands. In the years that followed, they had two children – the son Liron and the daughter Libev – and in the Yom Kippur War, Dayan volunteered from the police to the IDF, To the unit for the disposal of explosive devices of the Engineering Corps. During the historic visit of Anwar Sadat, the Egyptian president in Israel, he was still responsible for the personal safety of the Egyptian president. On 27.11.1977, the sabotage laboratory carried out an experiment aimed at examining ways to control black gunpowder and other chemicals. During the experiment, two police officers were killed, including a gentleman. He was still thirty years old. He was buried in the cemetery in Kiryat Shaul, Tel Aviv. Left a wife and two children – four years old and four weeks old, parents and two sisters. Police officials say that Dayan’s signature on laboratory work still exists today, and the criteria he has demanded in dealing with the subject of sabotage have not changed.