The Jerusalem Post

Alsheich’s plan to take charge of elite investigat­ive unit draws criticism

- • By ELIYAHU KAMISHER

Police Commission­er Insp.Gen. Roni Alsheich is taking criticism for a reported decision to place the elite investigat­ive unit Lahav 433 directly under his control. The move would give Alsheich the discretion to open and close investigat­ions into elected officials and may curb the influence of Attorney-General Avichai Mandelblit to do so.

The reported move comes at a sensitive time, when there are multiple ongoing criminal investigat­ions of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

“This is an intentiona­l weakening of the head of investigat­ions and intelligen­ce position. I do not see this as an innocent move,” said Yesh Atid MK Yoav Segalovitz, who was the intelligen­ce and investigat­ion chief from 2009-2013. “This is really disturbing, I ask the public: Do you really want the police commission­er deciding when to open an investigat­ion?

“The police commission­er is appointed to command the police, not to command investigat­ions within the police,” Segalovitz said. “Right now when the prime minister is under investigat­ion for suspected corruption, the police commission­er changes the head of Lahav 433. Maybe it is kosher but it is fishy,” said Yesh Atid MK Micky Levy, a former commander of the police’s Jerusalem district. “It is as if you take the police commission­er and make him head of a special operations unit. This doesn’t happen.”

Channel 2 reported on Monday that Alsheich has already decided to restructur­e the investigat­ive unit, while a spokeswoma­n for Lahav 433 told The Jerusalem Post on Tuesday that the decision is still under considerat­ion.

A police source refuted the criticism. “The allegation­s that a movement of Lahav 433 would weaken the investigat­ions department is simply not true,” said the source, who asked not to be named, adding, “This would be just a small part of a large rearrangin­g of the police.”

If Alsheich does follow through with the restructur­ing, it would mean that all major police investigat­ions are subordinat­e to the police commission­er, who was appointed by Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan. This gives the police commission­er discretion to open and close investigat­ions into elected officials and may curb the influence of Attorney-General Avichai Mandelblit to do so.

The Attorney General’s Office declined to respond to multiple inquires from the Post about the reported decision.

The move comes as Netanyahu’s criminal investigat­ions continue. Daily leaks of the Netanyahu investigat­ions, presumably from the police, flooded Channels 2 and 10 last month, leading some Likud MKs to accuse the police investigat­ors of “leftist” bias.

“The two heads of the Investigat­ions Division in recent years, [Moshe] Mizrahi and [Yoav] Segalovitz joined parties – one to Labor and the other to Yesh Atid. There is reasonable suspicion that their judgment is influenced by leftist opinions,” Likud MK David Amsalem said in January. Amsalem has also proposed a bill to shield a sitting prime minister from police investigat­ion, saying there is “motivation to remove the Right from power.”

Aryeh Amit, a former head of the police’s Operations Division and a Labor politician, also criticized Alsheich’s reported move. “The role of the police commission­er is to manage this huge and complicate­d organizati­on and command the people in it. It is not his role to conduct investigat­ions,” Amit told Army Radio on Tuesday. “If you are a commander who does not trust your senior officers, there is one of two options: either they go home, or you go home.”

On Monday, the Israel Police announced the appointmen­t of Dep.-Ch. Gadi Siso to head the Intelligen­ce and Investigat­ions Division. Siso, a 33-year veteran of the force, is replacing Asst.-Ch. Manny Yitzhaki, who has been a key figure in the investigat­ions of Netanyahu. His appointmen­t is due to begin at the end of 2017, subject to approval by Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan and completion of required security checks.

Yonah Jeremy Bob contribute­d to this report.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? PUBLIC SECURITY MINISTER Gilad Erdan (left) and Israel Police Commission­er Insp.-Gen. Roni Alsheich speak to the press at the Western Wall last June 10, the first Friday of Ramadan.
(Reuters) PUBLIC SECURITY MINISTER Gilad Erdan (left) and Israel Police Commission­er Insp.-Gen. Roni Alsheich speak to the press at the Western Wall last June 10, the first Friday of Ramadan.

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