The Standard (St. Catharines)

Israeli PM confidant accused of bribery

- ARON HELLER

JERUSALEM — Israeli police on Tuesday said they suspect a close confidant of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of offering a sitting judge a top posting in exchange for dropping a corruption case against Netanyahu’s wife.

Nir Hefetz, a former spokesman of the Netanyahu family, is suspected of suggesting to Judge Hila Gerstel that she could be appointed attorney general if she killed a pending case against Sara Netanyahu’s excessive household spending. The offer never materializ­ed.

Earlier, police named Hefetz as one of two Netanyahu associates under arrest for their suspected role in a separate wide-ranging corruption probe.

Netanyahu denies any wrongdoing.

“Nir Hefetz never presented this ludicrous offer to the prime minister and his wife, he was never asked by them to make such an offer and we can’t imagine that Hefetz would even imagine such a thing,” Netanyahu said.

Earlier Tuesday, police identified Hefetz and Shlomo Filber, the former director of the communicat­ions ministry under Netanyahu, as the two suspects in promoting regulation worth hundreds of millions of dollars to Israel’s Bezeq telecom company, in return for favourable coverage of Netanyahu in a highly popular subsidiary news site.

Netanyahu, who held the communicat­ions portfolio until last year, has not yet been named as a suspect in the case but is expected to be questioned.

Bezeq’s controllin­g shareholde­r Shaul Elovitch is also in custody, along with his wife, son and other top Bezeq executives. Former journalist­s at the Walla news site have attested to being pressured to refrain from negative reporting of Netanyahu.

The new probe comes days after police announced there was sufficient evidence to indict Netanyahu for bribery, fraud and breach of trust in two separate cases.

Netanyahu is accused of receiving lavish gifts from Hollywood mogul Arnon Milchan and Australian billionair­e James Packer. In return, police say Netanyahu had operated on Milchan’s behalf on U.S. visa matters, legislated a tax break and connected him with an Indian businessma­n. In the second case, Netanyahu is accused of offering a newspaper publisher legislatio­n that would weaken his paper’s main rival in return for more favourable coverage.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, denies that a former spokesman offered a judge a top posting in return for dropping a corruption case against Sara Netanyahu, right.
GETTY IMAGES FILES Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, denies that a former spokesman offered a judge a top posting in return for dropping a corruption case against Sara Netanyahu, right.

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