The Jerusalem Post

Journalist Ben Caspit gets court to order partial disclosure of Sara Netanyahu’s work life

- • By YONAH JEREMY BOB

The wife of the prime minister, Sara Netanyahu, and the Jerusalem Municipali­ty must partially disclose aspects of her work life as a psychologi­st, the Jerusalem District Court ruled on Sunday.

More specifical­ly, at the request of Ben Caspit, a reporter for The Jerusalem Post’s sister publicatio­n Maariv, the court ordered disclosure of the starting date for Netanyahu’s employment with the municipali­ty, her work hours per month over a 12-month period, and time periods where she took extended leave.

The court denied Caspit’s request to compel disclosure of her salary, the identity of her superviser, the identity of institutio­ns she has serviced, and facts related to the handling of any disciplina­ry issues in the work-place.

Caspit filed a request with the municipali­ty to disclose the informatio­n in December 2016, but the city and Netanyahu refused, claiming the request violated her right to privacy.

Ultimately, the court agreed with Netanyahu that she had a right to privacy regarding a number of the issues Caspit wanted disclosed, but said that questions about when she worked and how many hours were made legitimate by Netanyahu’s “own use of her [psychologi­st] role in the press.”

In other words, once she discussed with the media her role as a psychologi­st in order to garner positive media attention, basic facts about how long and when she worked became fair game, even as more substantiv­e data remained private.

Sources close to the Netanyahu family responded to the decision saying, “we praise the court for drawing a line against the hunt and crusade that Ben Caspit conducted against Mrs. Netanyahu for 20 years in order to harm the prime minister and his family by any means.”

They asserted that most of Caspit’s requests were rejected and that this proved even Netanyahu had a right to privacy.

Further, the sources contended that the municipali­ty had revealed that there were no complaints against Netanyahu and that, Caspit’s father, Yitzhak, had twice rallied to Netanyahu’s defense in 2010, dismissing his son’s attacks on her.

The Jerusalem Municipali­ty responded to the court ruling on Sara Netanyahu and said that she should be treated as any other employee, but it will respect the ruling and act accordingl­y.

“There should be a balance between the informatio­n that is given due to transparen­cy and informatio­n that is not published due to personal privacy,” read a statement issued by the municipali­ty on Sunday.

“The court partially accepted the appeal and determined that due to her [Netanyahu’s] special status, the municipali­ty should reveal some details that we unusually do not disclose when it comes to other employees.

“The municipali­ty will act accordingl­y,” it reads.

Udi Shaham contribute­d to this report.

 ?? (Wikimedia Commons) ?? BEN CASPIT
(Wikimedia Commons) BEN CASPIT

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