Los Angeles Times

Netanyahu, wife questioned in bribe case

The Israeli premier, on the eve of a U.S. visit, faces his eighth police interrogat­ion.

- By Noga Tarnopolsk­y Tarnopolsk­y is a special correspond­ent.

JERUSALEM — Israeli police questioned Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for five hours Friday in a far-reaching bribery investigat­ion in which he and his wife are suspected of offering handsome regulatory and financial benefits to a telecom giant in exchange for positive news coverage.

The interrogat­ion marked the eighth time Netanyahu has been questioned in connection with three separate corruption cases and occurred on the eve of the prime minister’s visit to Washington, where he is scheduled to meet with President Trump. Netanyahu has been under increasing criticism in Israel as the cases have unfolded.

Sara Netanyahu, the prime minister’s wife, was also questioned in the case in a simultaneo­us but separate interrogat­ion conducted at police headquarte­rs. Netanyahu was questioned at his official residence in Jerusalem.

Police already have recommende­d that the prime minister be indicted in connection with two other corruption cases involving alleged bribery and favor-trading, but Atty. Gen. Avichai Mandelblit has yet to respond to that recommenda­tion. The attorney general did, however, authorize police to conduct parallel interrogat­ions to prevent Netanyahu and his wife from potentiall­y coordinati­ng their accounts.

In one of the earlier bribery cases, allegedly involving gifts of wine and cigars from various businessme­n, Netanyahu and his wife were questioned days apart, for which Mandelblit was severely criticized.

The Netanyahus claim the lavish gifts were acts of generosity from two wealthy friends — Israeli-born Hollywood producer Arnon Milchan and Australian billionair­e James Packer.

Another case centers around Netanyahu’s alleged efforts to gain positive news coverage in Yediot Aharonot, Israel’s leading daily newspaper.

Authoritie­s said Netanyahu was caught on tape offering the paper’s publisher, Arnon Mozes, a deal through which he would suppress Yediot’s main competitor — the free daily Israel Hayom, owned by Netanyahu backer and Las Vegas mogul Sheldon Adelson — in exchange for favorable coverage. Yediot is generally critical of the government.

Netanyahu has not been named as a suspect in a fourth unfolding corruption case, involving the allegedly improper procuremen­t of submarines for Israel’s navy, but several of his closest associates have been arrested in the investigat­ion.

During Friday’s interrogat­ion, Netanyahu and his wife were questioned as potential criminal suspects in the case involving telecommun­ications giant Bezeq, a case far more expansive than the others. Netanyahu, who served as minister of communicat­ions until last year in addition to his duties as prime minister, is alleged to have asked Shaul Elovitch, who owns Bezeq, to guarantee the Netanyahus positive news coverage in exchange for regulatory favors for Bezeq.

Elovitch, his wife and their adult son have been arrested in connection with the case.

In what has become an expected Netanyahu ritual, the prime minister posted a video on his Facebook page professing his innocence in the latest case.

“I want to let you know I feel confident, because there won’t be anything, and I want to say one more thing to the millions of Israeli citizens who express such strong support for me, for my spouse and for my family: You warm our hearts, thank you,” he said in the video.

He said he will be meeting with Trump — “a great friend, a true friend of the state of Israel” — congressio­nal leaders and lobbyists in what he twice described as “a very important trip.”

Netanyahu and Trump are expected to discuss the expanding Iranian military presence in Syria, which borders on Israel’s north. The Israeli government feels increasing­ly isolated as it faces the growing threat of a proxy war with Iran’s Lebanonbas­ed ally, Hezbollah, a major force fighting on behalf of Syrian President Bashar Assad. Channel 10 news reported that Israel believes “it is convenient for [the Americans] to let us be their contractor in Syria.” For the U.S., Israel believes, defeating Islamic State in Syria is “more urgent” than stopping Iran in Syria.

Netanyahu’s relations with Jews in the U.S. remain poor following the abrupt decision by the government last year to cancel the Western Wall deal, a compromise with Israel’s ultra-Orthodox political parties that would have allowed the liberal Jewish movements that represent the majority of American Jews an egalitaria­n place of their own for prayer at the holy site.

 ?? Zoltan Mathe MTI ?? BENJAMIN NETANYAHU, with his wife, Sara, is accused of offering regulatory favors to a telecommun­ications giant in exchange for positive news coverage.
Zoltan Mathe MTI BENJAMIN NETANYAHU, with his wife, Sara, is accused of offering regulatory favors to a telecommun­ications giant in exchange for positive news coverage.

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