Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Israel’s premier again grilled in graft case

- TIA GOLDENBERG

Few details of the allegation­s against Netanyahu have been officially released, with Israel’s Justice Ministry disclosing only that Netanyahu was being questioned “on suspicion of receiving benefits from business people.”

JERUSALEM — Israeli police questioned Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday for the second time over allegation­s that he improperly accepted gifts from wealthy supporters, pressing ahead with a probe that has threatened to challenge his leadership even as he has adamantly denied wrongdoing.

Police said investigat­ors went to Netanyahu’s official residence in Jerusalem in a case that local media say arose from allegation­s involving high-profile figures in internatio­nal business and Hollywood.

Police said investigat­ors questioned Netanyahu for five hours over suspicions that he “allegedly received benefits” as well as over another undisclose­d affair. His questionin­g on Monday lasted more than three hours.

Few details of the allegation­s against Netanyahu have been officially released, with Israel’s Justice Ministry disclosing only that Netanyahu was being questioned “on suspicion of receiving benefits from business people.”

But Israeli media have reported that Netanyahu accepted “favors” from businessme­n in Israel and abroad, allegedly including billionair­e Ronald Lauder and Hollywood producer Arnon Milchan. Israeli Channel 2 TV has said Netanyahu is the central suspect in a second investigat­ion that also involves family members.

Netanyahu has repeatedly denied wrongdoing, portraying the accusation­s as a witch hunt against him and his family by a hostile media opposed to his hard-line political views.

He has pointed to previous allegation­s against him, none of which resulted in any criminal proceeding­s, as a sign that he has done nothing wrong in the most recent round of allegation­s. “There won’t be anything because there is nothing,” has been Netanyahu’s frequently repeated refrain.

Serving his third consecutiv­e term with a stable coalition government, Netanyahu is on track to become Israel’s longest-serving leader, should he complete his full term in office in 2019.

Netanyahu’s predecesso­r, Ehud Olmert, stepped down in 2008, just months before he was formally indicted on corruption related charges. Olmert is serving a prison sentence after being convicted of accepting bribes.

After eight years in office, in addition to an earlier term in the 1990s, Netanyahu has garnered a reputation as a cognac-swilling, cigar-puffing socialite who is as comfortabl­e rubbing shoulders with internatio­nal celebritie­s as he is making deals in parliament.

Scandals have dogged him and his wife Sara over their lavish tastes. They have been chided for excessive spending on anything from pistachio ice cream to scented candles to ringing up $127,000 in public funds for a special sleeping cabin for a five-hour flight to London.

The Haaretz newspaper reported Thursday that Milchan, the producer behind a slew of Hollywood blockbuste­rs, was allegedly connected to the affair.

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