Avshalom Cohen: Charges, Sentencing, and the Hayim Cohen Case

ODESSA (TX)
Legal Clarity [London, UK]

July 6, 2026

By Legal Clarity team

A look at the Avshalom Cohen case, how the abuse was uncovered, the charges and sentencing involved, and the related conviction of Hayim Cohen.

Avshalom Cohen, born Zackery Cate, is the eldest of nine boys adopted by Hayim Nissim Cohen, a Houston-area man who fabricated a Hasidic Jewish identity and used social media to mask years of sexual abuse against his children. In June 2025, Avshalom Cohen was sentenced to eight years in prison after pleading guilty to two counts of sexual assault of a sibling. His case is one piece of a sprawling criminal matter that also resulted in his adoptive father receiving a 40-year sentence with no possibility of parole.

The Cohen Household

Hayim Nissim Cohen was born Jeffrey Lujan Vejil in Odessa, Texas, in 1984. He legally changed his name in Dallas County and constructed a false identity as a Hasidic Jew from Williamsburg, New York, despite having no evidence of a religious conversion.1 As a single man, he adopted nine boys, changed their names during the adoption process, required them to dress in accordance with his fabricated persona, and claimed they came from Jewish families who spoke Hebrew or Yiddish.2

Cohen built a substantial online following under the brand “Our Unique Family,” documenting the children’s lives on TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, and Facebook. His TikTok channels attracted hundreds of thousands of followers and featured videos that garnered over five million views, showing the children dancing, performing skits, cooking kosher food, and celebrating Jewish holidays.2 Prosecutors later said Cohen used his social media presence to “groom” the community and the people around the children, creating a public image that concealed ongoing abuse.3 Cohen also posted content showing himself using supplemental oxygen and a wheelchair, claiming a chronic illness that investigators found no evidence of.1

How the Abuse Came to Light

In February 2023, a then-17-year-old adopted son used a burner phone to call into an Atlanta-based podcast called BlindSkinnedBeauty and disclosed that he and his brothers had been sexually abused by Cohen since he was eleven years old.4 Child Protective Services agents traced the caller’s IP address and interviewed him on February 6, 2023.5 Initially, the teenager denied the abuse to the investigator, but after the investigator played the podcast recording, he became visibly distressed and confirmed what had happened, explaining that he had not been “brave enough to say anything” because his adoptive father had told the brothers it would be “one person’s word against the rest of them.”6

Hayim Cohen was arrested on February 11, 2023, and charged with continuous sex abuse of a child and sexual assault of a child under seventeen.5 At the time of his arrest, he was already out on bond for a 2019 indecency charge involving a sixteen-year-old Spanish foreign exchange student who had been placed in his home.4 CPS removed the six youngest boys from the home and placed them in foster care. One of the sons later reported that CPS had conducted eight prior investigations into the family, none of which led to any action, alleging that Cohen would “bribe or scare” the children whenever investigators came around.6

Avshalom Cohen’s Arrest and Charges

Avshalom Cohen had briefly enlisted in the U.S. Army in February 2023, just before his father’s second arrest. He received an administrative discharge the following month.7 On February 23, 2023, he appeared at his father’s court hearing in the 182nd District Court wearing his Army uniform, presenting what was described as a “united front” with the family patriarch.7 That appearance would later become a focal point of his victims’ anger at his own sentencing.

Five months after Hayim Cohen’s arrest, Avshalom himself began accumulating criminal charges across multiple Texas counties:

  • Maverick County (April 2023): During an Operation Lone Star traffic stop near Eagle Pass, Avshalom was found driving a van carrying eight undocumented immigrants from Honduras, Mexico, and Guatemala. Officers also recovered a gun, a smoke bomb, and a fake police badge. He was indicted on a misdemeanor charge of unlawful carrying of a weapon and later convicted by a jury in May 2024 on smuggling and weapons charges, receiving a three-year prison sentence.8
  • Fort Bend County (July 2023): On July 17, 2023, Missouri City police arrested him on charges of possession of drugs and a firearm. He was held on a collective $60,000 bail. As of June 2025, that drug charge remained active.7
  • Harris County (sexual assault): According to a July 13, 2023, arrest warrant, one of his siblings alleged that Avshalom had sexually abused him on various nights beginning when the sibling was approximately fourteen and Avshalom was twenty.7 He was ultimately charged in Harris County with counts of sexual assault involving a prohibited relationship.9

He was also accused of violently beating a younger adopted brother who had been arguing with their father.2

Sentencing and Victim Impact Statements

On June 27, 2025, Avshalom Cohen, then twenty-four, appeared in a Harris County courtroom and was sentenced to eight years in prison after accepting a plea deal on two counts of sexual assault of a prohibited relationship.8

Two of his adoptive brothers, identified as Yuki, then twenty, and TJ, then nineteen, delivered victim impact statements. Yuki directly confronted Avshalom over his decision to appear in Army dress at their father’s earlier hearing, telling him: “You went to court and defended a pedophile in the United States Army’s uniform. You sat next to me in juvenile court and attempted to regain custody of the children that you helped abuse.” Yuki added, “And what’s worse? I cared for you. I thought that I could turn to you.” He closed with a warning: “If you ever harm another child, they won’t be sentencing you again. They’ll be burying you.”8

TJ’s statement was brief: “I don’t really got much to say to you because you’re worth nothing.”8

Hayim Cohen’s Conviction and Sentence

Avshalom’s sentencing followed the resolution of his adoptive father’s far larger case. On April 7, 2025, Hayim Nissim Cohen pleaded guilty to four counts of continuous sexual assault of a child and one count of indecency with a child. The plea came less than a month before he was scheduled to go to trial.10 Judge Danilo Lacayo sentenced him to four concurrent 40-year terms plus a concurrent 15-year term, with no eligibility for parole. The judge told Cohen directly: “You will die in prison.”11

At the sentencing hearing on April 14, 2025, six of the adopted sons delivered victim impact statements, addressing their father by his birth name, Jeffrey. The son who had originally called into the podcast, by then nearly twenty years old, told Cohen: “You are a sick and twisted individual with an incurable disease. You preyed upon innocent, innocent young boys who had nothing.” The youngest victim to speak, a boy still in elementary school, said: “You can’t hurt me anymore. I hope you feel scared in jail, as we did living with you.”10

Cohen, who was wheeled into the courtroom in a motorized wheelchair, sat silent and visibly emotionless throughout the proceedings. His defense attorney, Charles Johnson, said the plea was preferable to the potential five consecutive life sentences Cohen faced if the case had gone to trial.10 Harris County Assistant District Attorney Jana Oswald said the outcome felt like justice for the seven boys and spared them from having to testify and recount their experiences at trial.12

CPS Failures and the Exchange Student Case

The Cohen case drew attention to repeated failures by Texas Child Protective Services. According to one of the sons, CPS had investigated the household eight separate times without taking protective action.6 The teenager who eventually made the podcast call said he had previously lied to CPS investigators, telling them there was no abuse, because he feared no one would believe him and because Cohen intimidated the children before and after every visit.6

Separately, a foreign exchange student from Spain who lived with the family from September 2018 to April 2019 accused Hayim Cohen of sexual assault. That student reported the behavior to his school principal and law enforcement, leading to felony indecency charges filed in 2019.13 In April 2021, the student filed a civil lawsuit in Harris County District Court against Cohen and the student exchange organization that had placed him in the home, seeking more than $1 million in damages.13

As of June 2025, Avshalom Cohen is serving his eight-year sentence for sexual assault. He also carries the three-year Maverick County conviction for smuggling and weapons charges and faces an unresolved drug charge in Fort Bend County.8

https://legalclarity.org/avshalom-cohen-charges-sentencing-and-the-hayim-cohen-case/