The Jerusalem Post

Did PID cover up complaints of abuse to turn Nir Hefetz against Netanyahu?

- ANALYSIS • By YONAH JEREMY BOB

Channel 12 Amit Segal’s Sunday night report was a rare success in shattering the armor and unity of law enforcemen­t regarding the handling of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s public corruption cases.

Segal did not merely make allegation­s about police or state prosecutio­n conduct which could be interprete­d in multiple ways and where the prosecutio­n generally has the right to keep certain issues under wraps as internal prosecutor­ial tactics.

He brought actual emails and accusation­s from high level Police Investigat­ion Department officials of a coverup by those officials’ colleagues at PID and in the state prosecutio­n.

This is far more damaging to the prosecutio­n than any previous charge because there is an insider, however isolated, supporting the allegation­s.

Essentiall­y former senior PID official Dubi Shertzer has claimed that he complained to his superiors in PID about police investigat­ors’ alleged abusive treatment of former Netanyahu ally- turned- state’s- witness, Nir Hefetz.

There are a number of accusation­s against the police for their treatment of Hefetz to allegedly get him to manufactur­e false allegation­s and turn on Netanyahu regarding Case 4000.

Next, Segal claims that either PID or the prosecutio­n or some combinatio­n of them covered up the complaint and failed to disclose the complaint to defense lawyers until Segal broke the story in mid- September.

Yet, at the time that Segal initially broke the story, the prosecutio­n denied that any such complaint had been filed, calling it fake news.

Only with Segal’s follow- up report on Sunday, including disclosing internal law enforcemen­t emails, did the prosecutio­n admit that there might be some truth to the accusation­s.

In a remarkably detailed response of internal prosecutio­n issues, AttorneyGe­neral Avichai Mandelblit’s office sought to debunk the cover- up narrative.

They provided a full copy of an email between lead Netanyahu prosecutor, Deputy State Attorney Liat Ben Ari and current PID chief Karen Ben Menachem.

According to the email, Ben Ari immediatel­y asked Ben Menachem for informatio­n in response to Segal’s mid- September report.

As the prosecutio­n narrative goes, Ben Menachem responded in mid- September that she knew of no complaint being filed by a member of PID about police treatment of Hefetz.

Next, the prosecutio­n explained that it is possible that such a complaint was raised verbally by Shertzer to deputy PID head Moshe Saada back in early 2018, but that Ben Menachem never heard about it because she did not take over PID until mid2018. In this narrative, Saada would have decided that the issue did not warrant further follow- up, so he did not make a record of it and never mentioned it to Ben Menachem or anyone else.

The prosecutio­n then goes so far as to suggest that Shertzer never even complained about Hefetz’s treatment. They suggest that either Shertzer made a complaint unrelated to Hefetz to Saada or that Shertzer is

making up the entire conversati­on.

Saada, for his part, seems to be saying that there was some kind of conversati­on, but that he had forgotten about it because it was not important. If this was not a cover- up – and it seems that it was not or that at least it was not a wide cover- up – it does seem to flag the deputy of PID as being grossly negligent.

TO UNDERSTAND why, we need to recall the two narratives about exactly what happened to Hefetz during his interrogat­ion.

The most serious public charge was raised by then- justice minister Amir Ohana at the Knesset plenum in November 2019. Ohana has been accused of violating a gag order on

the issue, such that this report by The Jerusalem Post will only summarize part of his charges that are likely to come out as part of the public record during the trial itself.

During his speech, Ohana said that the police in February 2018 used a third party – whom Hefetz allegedly had a romantic connection with despite being married – to extort him to become a state witness. Nothing about their connection had anything to do with the Netanyahu case.

The stress this issue caused Hefetz was so acute that in November 2019, he yelled at the judges, “you can just kill me!” during a hearing about whether to remove the gag order. Hefetz stomped around the hallways of the courtroom trying to flee a wave of media attention, his face full of anger and despair.

The prosecutio­n told the court at the time that almost all of the informatio­n under the gag order had nothing to do with Netanyahu and that parties who wanted the informatio­n only sought it to intimidate Hefetz not to testify.

The Post learned from sources with direct knowledge that the third party was not brought by the police for the primary purpose of pressuring Hefetz to become a state’s witness. Instead, the person was brought to the police station just as Hefetz’s wife was brought there – as part of standard police tactics to learn everything relevant about a suspect.

Police intelligen­ce regarding the third party portrayed a close relationsh­ip and that interrogat­ing the person could lead to relevant electronic evidence about Hefetz and Case 4000. The Post has also learned that there was a court- signed warrant for searching the person’s residence.

Law enforcemen­t will need to admit at trial that once the third party was at the police station, they did instigate a sort of confrontat­ion between that person and Hefetz.

HOWEVER, THEIR narrative will be that this was legal. They will argue they can try to convince a suspect that they know everything about them to bring them to admit the truth and their role and others’ roles in crimes being probed.

Put differentl­y, they will depict the confrontat­ion as an exercise in getting to the truth.

Furthermor­e, they will highlight that Hefetz waited another two weeks after the confrontat­ion with the third party before deciding to turn state’s witness.

Finally, law enforcemen­t would point out that Netanyahu’s top aide has said that when he turned state’s witness it was not because of this third party. Rather, he concluded that it was in his interest to reveal the truth – likely to avoid jail time. Maybe law enforcemen­t’s tactics will be ruled valid by the court at trial and maybe invalid.

Regardless, Saada should have known that anything that might be remotely construed as connected to the Netanyahu case needed to be recorded and raised with all officials to the highest levels.

If the prosecutio­n’s suggestion that Shertzer never made a formal complaint about Hefetz’s treatment is true, then it means a high- level PID official, Shertzer, is lying.

There is bad blood between Shertzer and the highest echelons of police and the prosecutio­n. He has sued them to enforce an allegedly unfulfille­d six- year- old promise that if he served for one year in PID, he could return with a major promotion to the regular police.

Shertzer, with the support of former PID chief Uri Carmel, said his promotion was held up in retaliatio­n for probes he ran at PID into members of the police high command. It may never be possible to fully get to the bottom of the Shertzer- Hefetz story.

But Segal’s story has “drawn blood” in a way that Netanyahu’s lawyers had not succeeded to date and will likely come back to bite the prosecutio­n during Netanyahu’s trial.

 ?? ( Flash90) ?? ‘ THERE ARE a number of accusation­s against the police for their treatment of Nir Hefetz to allegedly get him to manufactur­e false allegation­s and turn on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu regarding Case 4000.’
( Flash90) ‘ THERE ARE a number of accusation­s against the police for their treatment of Nir Hefetz to allegedly get him to manufactur­e false allegation­s and turn on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu regarding Case 4000.’

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