After his death, Galili's extensive personal collection of firearms was given to his son Zeev, who donated most of them to the
Israel Defense Forces History Museum and kept the remainder, 38 revolvers, 12 rifles, 46
magazines, and thousands of individual bullets, Zeev Galili joined the
Israeli Ground Forces, initially as a driver before his father arranged for his transfer to weapons development, where he served for 40 years. In 1998, Zeev Galili was arrested after his workplace, a weapons store, was linked to the sales of firearms and ammunition to undercover
Hezbollah agent , but released after two days of questioning at an underground
Shin Bet facility. On 25 July 2011,
Kfar Sava police confiscated the gun collection from Zeev Galili, who had been required to turn in all his weapons due to a criminal complaint following a domestic dispute at his home and voluntarily shown officers additional firearms he kept at his parents' house. Police were unaware of his father's identity and mistakenly believed Zeev Galili to be an
arms trafficker. Zeev Galili was remanded for five days and questioned for nine hours about two of the guns, an engraved Nazi-era
Mauser and a still-functional prototype
Jericho, as well as a razor
whetstone, which police claimed was a bomb detonator. The initial domestic complaint was dismissed as unfounded, but the weapons were kept for ballistic testing. Zeev Galili later complained that the officers had deprived him of food, causing him severe pain as a diabetic, with his attorney Michael Ofir adding that the police made sensationalist comments immediately after the seizure of the guns. Zeev Galili put a great emphasis on having the collection returned without damage, saying "It is the only memento I have of him. Some parents leave poems and love letters behind. My father left me a collection of weapons.". == References ==