The Jerusalem Post

Police question gov’t company officials, suppliers over bribery

- • By DANIEL K. EISENBUD

Five senior staff members and suppliers of an unidentifi­ed stateowned company were detained for questionin­g Tuesday by the police’s Lahav 443 Unit, for allegedly taking bribes to expedite tenders, grant appointmen­ts and apportion other favorable treatment.

While most of the details of the probe are being withheld, the National Financial Investigat­ions Unit said the unidentifi­ed suspects were being questioned after their computers and related files were seized during the protracted investigat­ion.

Those being questioned include the company’s CEO, marketing director and three suppliers. If arrested, the suspects will be arraigned at Rishon Lezion Magistrate’s Court.

In a brief statement, the police said it was cracking down on all financial crimes in government companies and will “bring offenders to justice.”

“The police will continue to investigat­e and expose illicit processes, such as promoting tenders and appointmen­ts for [suppliers] in exchange for bribes, and will continue to strike at the heart of corruption wherever it appears in government­al companies,” the statement said.

Also on Tuesday, coalition chairman and Likud MK David Bitan – described as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s “human shield” – was reportedly being questioned by police for accepting bribes to pay off a NIS 7 million debt before entering the Knesset in 2015.

While police have yet to confirm the probe, according to Haaretz, the National Fraud Investigat­ion Unit has gathered evidence against Bitan stemming from his time as deputy mayor of Rishon Lezion between 2005 and 2015.

Bitan chaired the city’s local zoning board and held its engineerin­g portfolio before joining Likud and becoming coalition chairman following the last general election.

He is accused of accepting money from unidentifi­ed businessme­n during his tenure at Rishon Lezion’s municipali­ty, to pay off the debt.

The probe, which has reportedly since ensnared several Rishon Lezion officials, was authorized by Attorney-General Avichai Mandelblit and State Attorney Shai Nitzan, Haaretz reported.

According to an unidentifi­ed Rishon Lezion official, Bitan briefly went into hiding to dodge his creditors, and allegedly accepted bribes from developers in exchange for green-lighting constructi­on projects.

“One day, two thugs came into the office, and with one glance you could see what type of people they were,” the official told TheMarker.

“They immediatel­y started yelling, ‘Where is David Bitan?’ I said to them, ‘Listen, I’m searching for him just as much as you are.’”

Bitan categorica­lly denied the allegation­s on Tuesday, which he dismissed as a “shameful witchhunt conducted by Haaretz against right-wingers and anyone who does not agree with their agenda.

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