The High Court of Justice on Sunday issued a mixed ruling to a petition  by rights groups against the state's policies of holding Palestinians in  custody for periods that exceed those of Israelis living beyond the  Green Line.
  The court issued a partial ruling to a petition filed by the Association  for Civil Rights in Israel (ACRI), Yesh Din, and the Public Committee  Against Torture, which demanded that the state apply the law equally to  both Israeli and Palestinian minors in Judea and Samaria. 
 The court rejected the petition in regard to the maximum time of  detention prior to indictment for adults suspected of security crimes,  but ordered the state to explain its policies regarding maximum  detention periods for minors and adults suspected of non-security  crimes. In addition the court required the state to explain its policies  regarding the detention of suspects for the duration of legal  proceedings against them. 
 The court ordered the state to address the issues by September 15, 2014. 
 The ACRI said that the state had eased its detention policies in the wake of the petition. 
 “The petition led to a shrinking of the discriminatory gap between  Israelis and Palestinians living in the territories as it relates to the  lengths of custody in which they are held,” said Laila Margalit, an 
attorney
 for ACRI. “On some issues, the court made clear that it was not willing to make do with the progress that was made.”