Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Netanyahu returns to court in graft case

Late bracelet accusation leads to delay

- ILAN BEN ZION

JERUSALEM — Former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu appeared in court for the first time in over half a year Tuesday as a one-time confidant prepared to take the stand against him in a high-profile corruption case.

But the long-awaited testimony was delayed until next week after a legal challenge from Netanyahu’s lawyers.

Nir Hefetz, a former Netanyahu aide, is a star prosecutio­n witness in the case against Netanyahu, with his close proximity to the Netanyahu during several years in office a key part of the evidence. Hefetz left a long career in journalism in 2009 to work as a spokesman for Netanyahu’s government, then in 2014 became the Netanyahu family’s spokesman and adviser.

Netanyahu entered the courtroom Tuesday accompanie­d by a lawyer, his younger son, Avner, and a pair of supporters from his Likud party. The security presence around the building was much smaller than past sessions, when Netanyahu was the prime minister.

His lawyers immediatel­y asked that Tuesday’s session be delayed after reports that another witness had come forward with new evidence alleging that Netanyahu’s wife, Sara, had accepted an expensive bracelet as a gift from two billionair­e friends, Hollywood producer Arnon Milchan and Australian billionair­e James Packer.

Netanyahu’s lawyers argued that the former prime minister and his wife were caught off-guard by the allegation­s and had the right to study the evidence before Hefetz took the stand.

After a short recess, the court accepted the request and postponed Hefetz’s testimony until Monday. Several dozen supporters waited for Netanyahu outside the building, with one man shouting at journalist­s “we’ll throw you in the trash.”

Netanyahu has been accused of fraud, breach of trust and accepting bribes in three separate cases.

The first involves allegation­s that Netanyahu received gifts worth hundreds of thousands of dollars from wealthy friends, including Milchan and Packer. In the second case, Netanyahu is accused of orchestrat­ing positive coverage in a major Israeli paper in exchange for promoting legislatio­n that would have harmed the paper’s chief rival. The third one, nicknamed Case 4000, entails claims that Netanyahu passed legislatio­n worth hundreds of millions of dollars to the owner of Israeli telecom giant Bezeq in exchange for positive coverage on its Walla news site.

In 2018, after he was arrested by police in connection with Case 4000, Hefetz signed a state’s witness deal and provided investigat­ors with recordings of conversati­ons with Netanyahu and his family.

But because of his close connection with the former prime minister, Hefetz’s testimony is likely to be relevant to all three cases.

The former prime minister has denied any wrongdoing. As prime minister, Netanyahu long rejected calls to step down while under indictment, using his position to lash out at law enforcemen­t, the media and the courts.

But Netanyahu failed to win re-election in four consecutiv­e elections, with voters deadlocked over his leadership and trial.

Early this year, he was ousted from office after a constellat­ion of rivals managed to cobble together a ruling coalition without his long-dominant Likud party.

He is now opposition leader in the Knesset, Israel’s parliament.

Netanyahu’s criminal trial began in 2020, while the country was embroiled in a protracted political crisis and dealing with the start of the coronaviru­s pandemic. Witnesses started taking the stand in April, and proceeding­s are expected to last several years.

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