The Jerusalem Post

Regulator recommends indictment of PM’s former allies in Case 4000

- • By YONAH JEREMY BOB

The Israel Securities Authority recommende­d on Monday that top Bezeq, Yes and government officials be indicted on charges of fraud, violation of conflicts of interest rules and insider-data sharing.

Two of the suspects in Case 4000, Shaul Elovitch and Shlomo Filber, are former major allies of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Another is Bezeq CEO Stella Handler.

Filber, who was Likud campaign chairman in 2015 and an important Netanyahu aide in earlier years, was appointed Communicat­ions Ministry director-general by Netanyahu in 2015.

Elovitch, the controllin­g shareholde­r of Yes, Bezeq, Pelephone, Bezeq Internatio­nal, Spacecom Satellite Communicat­ions and Walla, has been a close friend of Netanyahu who, until June 2016, also served as communicat­ions minister.

State Comptrolle­r Joseph Shapira has alleged that Netanyahu may have violated conflict of interest principles in his relations with Filber and Elovitch, but none of that figured into Monday’s announceme­nt, nor has it spawned investigat­ions of the prime minister to date.

Elovitch, Handler and Filber already had been placed under temporary house arrest in July as the investigat­ion went into high gear. Additional top

officials also appear likely to be charged including, according to reports, Elovitch’s son, Or, and YES CEO Ron Ayalon.

Monday’s announceme­nt by the ISA confirmed that the allegation­s concern suspected securities fraud carried out by Elovitch and others.

The likely indictment­s center on suspicions that Elovitch sold YES, the satellite television service – of which he is also the controllin­g shareholde­r – to Bezeq at an excessive price, allowing him to pocket NIS 170 million.

Filber and other Bezeq officials are suspected of transferri­ng confidenti­al government and independen­t board-meeting data and meeting minutes to Elovitch, who then had an illegal inside track on the strategy of what was supposed to be Bezeq’s independen­t board and of government policy on key issues, which allowed him to illegally influence policy.

According to the ISA statement, Elovitch and his co-conspirato­rs at Bezeq and within the government acted systematic­ally and over an extended period of time in illegally coordinati­ng policy changes.

“I thank the Authority investigat­ors for their profession­al and strenuous work, which they performed night and day to complete the investigat­ion… the probe is one the most complex and charged that the authority has handled… using some of the most advanced technology in the world,” said ISA chairman Shmuel Hauser.

In July, the comptrolle­r report accused the premier of failing to disclose contacts with Elovitch in his role as communicat­ions minister from November 2014 to February 2017 and accused Attorney-General Avichai Mandelblit of being too lenient with Netanyahu regarding incomplete disclosure­s.

Mandelblit and the state prosecutor will make the ultimate decision about whether to indict the various suspects. •

 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu speaks at the Likud faction meeting in Jerusalem yesterday.
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu speaks at the Likud faction meeting in Jerusalem yesterday.

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