Israeli prosecutors are in advanced negotiations with four suspected Jewish terrorists over comparatively lenient plea bargains, Channel 2 television reported Wednesday night.

Inter alia, the emerging deal would impose a prison term of just seven years on the main suspect in the torching of a Palestinian home while the family was still inside. Nobody was hurt in that incident, but the house suffered damage.

The deal would also let the suspect, a minor, appeal the sentence.

According to the indictment, the man prepared the firebomb and threw it at the home of a Palestinian family in the West Bank town of Al-Mazra’a al-Qibliya. He is also accused, together with two other people, of possessing illegal weapons that were hidden in a crate in the settlement of Nahliel.

One of those weapons was a gas grenade, which he threw at a Palestinian house in Beitilu last year, the indictment continued. He is also charged with attacking Palestinians with sticks and tear gas on various occasions and of torching a car in Beitilu in 2014.

A second man has also been charged in the torching of the house in Al-Mazra’a al-Qibliya, and the emerging plea bargain would sentence him to six years in prison. He is also charged with assaulting Palestinians and torching a car. Like the first suspect, he would be able to appeal the sentence.

The third suspect would be sentenced to 40 months in jail under the deal, while the fourth would get six months of community service.

All four of the suspects were also charged with membership in a terrorist organization, and all but the fourth are charged with illegal weapons possession. In addition, the third suspect was charged with torching a car and throwing stones, while the fourth was charged with abetting the other three in their stone throwing by accompanying them in his car.

The plea bargains have not yet been signed, and in any case would need the court’s approval.

“The deal offered to my clients is indeed lenient compared to the usual sentences for ideological crime,” acknowledged their lawyer, Nachmi Fainblat. “But in comparison to the evidence in the case, it would have been possible to go even easier with my clients.”

“Nevertheless, we’ll consider the proposed plea bargain seriously,” he added.