Baltimore Sun

Israeli leader’s wife charged with fraud, breach of trust

- By Josef Federman

JERUSALEM — The wife of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was charged Thursday with misusing some $100,000 in public funds to order lavish meals from celebrity chefs, dealing an embarrassi­ng blow to the country’s first family and drawing fresh attention to a series of separate corruption investigat­ions plaguing the prime minister.

Although the indictment against Sara Netanyahu did not directly affect the prime minister, it ended a period of political victories that had bolstered the Israeli leader and distracted attention from his legal woes. Her lawyers denounced the charges as “baseless and delusional.”

Sara Netanyahu has long faced allegation­s of abusive behavior and living extravagan­tly. In 2016, a court ruled she abused an employee and awarded the man $42,000 in damages. Other former employees have accused her of mistreatme­nt, charges the Netanyahus have denied.

In Thursday’s indictment, the Justice Ministry said Sara Netanyahu was charged with fraud and breach of trust for allegedly overspendi­ng roughly $100,000 on private meals at the prime minister’s official residence, even when there was a full-time chef on staff. A former deputy director of the official residence was also charged.

Sara Netanyahu acted “to circumvent the rules and conditions” governing the official residence “in order to fraudulent­ly obtain state funding for various expenses for the accused and her family that were not supposed to be financed in this manner,” the indictment said.

It was not immediatel­y clear when her trial would begin. If convicted, she could face a maximum sen- Sara Netanyahu, the wife of Israel’s prime minister, has faced claims of abusive behavior and extravagan­t living. tence of five years behind bars for the most serious charge.

In a statement posted on the prime minister’s Facebook page, her lawyers said she was not even aware of the regulation­s, that the food had been ordered by an assistant and served primarily to staff and visiting dignitarie­s.

“This is the first time in Israel and in the world that the wife of a leader is brought to justice over food trays,” it said. “There was no fraud or breach of trust here or deceptivel­y receiving things or any other crime.”

The indictment threatened to reinforce the unflatteri­ng reputation the Netanyahus have gained over the years of enjoying an expensive lifestyle and being out of touch with most Israelis. Netanyahu also faces several police investigat­ions into alleged corruption, including accepting expensive gifts from billionair­e friends. The Netanyahus have denied any wrongdoing, and say they are the victims of a political witch hunt and hostile media.

Netanyahu has managed to deflect attention from his legal problems through a string of political and diplomatic victories in recent months. In May, Netanyahu announced that the Mossad spy agency had stolen tens of thousands of sensitive nuclear documents from archenemy Iran. The following week, the U.S. withdrew from the internatio­nal nuclear deal with Iran, a move that was warmly welcomed by Netanyahu. Israel has also carried out a number of successful airstrikes on Iranian targets in neighborin­g Syria, and it has celebrated the U.S. decision to move its embassy to Jerusalem over strong Palestinia­n and internatio­nal objections.

But Thursday’s indictment provided a reminder that Netanyahu has not put his troubles behind him. Gil Hoffman, chief political correspond­ent of The Jerusalem Post, said the indictment was a “devastatin­g blow” to the prime minister. He described Sara as “the power behind the throne.”

“He consults with her on key issues, both personal, political and even diplomatic and security issues, and now she’s under indictment and that’s very serious,” Hoffman said. “He himself has three criminal investigat­ions hanging over his head and that will make it harder for Netanyahu to govern.”

Israeli police questioned Netanyahu, his wife and son last week in connection to a corruption case involving the country’s telecom giant, Bezeq.

 ?? GALI TIBBON/GETTY-AFP 2017 ??
GALI TIBBON/GETTY-AFP 2017

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