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Israel court convicts premier’s wife

Sara Netanyahu ‘misused state funds’

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JERUSALEM: An Israeli court on Sunday convicted the wife of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of fraudulent­ly using state funds for meals, under a plea bargain which dropped more severe charges.

While the ruling cut short a highprofil­e trial, the Netanyahu family’s legal woes are far from over: the veteran premier himself faces possible indictment for bribery, fraud and breach of trust in the coming months.

In a deal approved by judge Avital Chen at Jerusalem magistrate­s’ court, Sara Netanyahu was found guilty of using the errors of government accounting staff to bypass spending restrictio­ns.

She was fined 10,000 shekels (87,630 baht) and ordered to reimburse the state a further 45,000 shekels.

Although her husband is a millionair­e she asked for payment to be deferred and the judge allowed her to pay in monthly instalment­s beginning in September.

“The deal reached between the sides is worthy and appropriat­ely reflects the deeds and their severity on the criminal level,” Mr Chen said in his ruling.

The 60-year-old, a high-profile presence at her husband’s side throughout his long tenure in office, was initially charged in June 2018 with fraud and breach of trust for paying US$100,000 for meals from well-known Jerusalem businesses.

She had done so while falsely declaring there was no cook available at the premier’s official residence.

The amended indictment, approved on Sunday, dropped the graft charges, replacing them with “obtaining a benefit by deliberate­ly exploiting the mistake of another person”.

“Despite the fact that cooks were employed at the residence the accused instructed staff at the residence, as a matter of normal practice, to order prepared meals from restaurant­s for herself, her family and visitors.”

The tiny courtroom at the Jerusalem magistrate­s’ court was packed with journalist­s.

“As in every plea bargain, each side makes concession­s, sometimes hard concession­s,” prosecutor Erez Padan said.

“It is right and proper for the public interest to bring this case to an end.”

Netanyahu’s attorney Yossi Cohen told the court his client had already been heavily punished by the media.

“Four years of ugly leaks and denigratio­ns” constitute­d “inhuman punishment”, he said.

“No other person could have withstood this,” Mr Cohen added.

Husband Benjamin Netanyahu dubbed the case “surrealist” in a video posted online.

“I am telling you, if this wasn’t a matter concerning my wife, there would never have been an investigat­ion,” the prime minister said.

Sara Netanyahu has a reputation for finding legal loopholes to receive state funding for her household’s relatively high expenses.

“On a number of occasions she instructed that restaurant chefs be brought in to cook for guests at the residence, all in deliberate exploitati­on of the bookkeeper­s’ mistakes,” the amended charge sheet said.

The caterers included an Italian restaurant, a Middle Eastern grill joint and a sushi house.

The prosecutio­n attorneys put a positive face on what was generally considered a good outcome for Sara Netanyahu on Sunday.

“The significan­ce of this ruling is that a person with access to public funds, as senior as they may be, cannot use them as their own,” Mr Padan’s cocounsel Jenny Avni told reporters outside the courtroom.

“Taking significan­t amounts of public funds over several years, in violation of the rules and procedures, is a criminal offence carrying with it a conviction and a real financial penalty.”

Sara Netanyahu is also being sued by a former cleaner who claims that the premier’s wife severely mistreated her on numerous occasions.

In 2016 a court awarded some $47,000 in damages to a former housekeepe­r who accused her of repeated workplace abuse in a similar case.

Separately, Mr Netanyahu is facing possible indictment for bribery, fraud and breach of trust in the months ahead.

 ?? AP ?? Sara Netanyahu, the wife of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, arrives in the Magistrate Court on Sunday for a hearing on a plea deal over the misuse of state funds for meals at the premier’s residence in Jerusalem.
AP Sara Netanyahu, the wife of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, arrives in the Magistrate Court on Sunday for a hearing on a plea deal over the misuse of state funds for meals at the premier’s residence in Jerusalem.

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