Netanyahu's inner circle key to criminal cases
Secret recordings, powerful media moguls, illicit
gifts of cigars and champagne, betrayals by trusted aides. The three corruption
cases against Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu have all the makings of
a political thriller.
On Thursday, after more than three years of
investigations, the most dominant Israeli politician of his generation was
charged with bribery, fraud and breach of trust.
Investigators have not revealed the informants who
provided the first tips about alleged corruption by the veteran conservative
nicknamed “King Bibi.” But from there they methodically picked off members of
the prime minister’s inner circle of hand-picked aides and senior officials as
state witnesses against him. The mounting evidence was revealed in a series of
tantalizing leaks that undercut what prosecutors allege was Netanyahu’s scheme
to control his public image by trading regulatory favors to news companies for
positive coverage.
The man heading the investigation was Israel’s
Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit, who was appointed by Netanyahu in 2016 and
had previously served as Bibi’s cabinet secretary starting in 2013.
“I had the privilege of working with him and
witnessing his many talents and capabilities as prime minister,” Mandelblit
said in announcing the charges. “The decision to file an indictment against him
was made with a heavy heart.”
Netanyahu has denied wrongdoing from the beginning
of the investigations and remained defiant in his emotional prime-time national
address on the night of his indictment. He called the cases an “attempted coup”
to overthrow him, based on “fabrications.”
The probe began with tips trickling into
investigators.
“Something smelled rotten, but it wasn’t clearly
criminal,” a law enforcement source with direct knowledge of the investigation
told Reuters.
Mandelblit launched an initial inquiry in July 2016,
soon after Netanyahu appointed him. Investigators soon focused on dealings
between the prime minister, Israeli Hollywood producer Arnon Milchan and
Australian billionaire James Packer.
These would eventually lead to Case 1000, in which
Netanyahu is charged with fraud and breach of trust for allegedly requesting
and receiving gifts from Packer and Milchan, which included a regular supply of
cigars and champagne.
The indictment alleges Netanyahu helped Milchan with
various business interests. Milchan and Packer provided testimony and have not
been charged with any wrongdoing.
During a separate probe of Netanyahu’s former chief
of staff, Ari Harow, investigators stumbled on a Pandora’s box: secret
recordings made on Harow’s mobile phone.
They documented a series of meetings between two men
who were then known publicly as enemies: Netanyahu and Arnon Mozes, the owner
of Israel’s best-selling newspaper, Yedioth Ahronoth.
“It was jaw-dropping,” said the source, describing
the moment investigators first heard the recordings.
In meetings held between 2008 and 2014, the two
allegedly discussed a deal in which Mozes would provide positive coverage of
Netanyahu and negative coverage of his political rivals, while Netanyahu would
push for regulations on Yedioth’s biggest competitor, Israel Hayom, a free
daily owned by U.S. casino mogul and Netanyahu supporter, Sheldon Adelson.
The 63-page indictment released on Thursday quotes a
meeting held in December 2014 during the run-up to the 2015 election.
Prosecutors allege the two men discussed a bill that would have limited Israel
Hayom’s circulation.
“We need to make sure you are prime minister,” Mozes
allegedly told Netanyahu. “Assuming there will be a law that you and I have
agreed upon, I will do my utmost best that you stick around for as long as you
want to.”
The bill the two men discussed would never become
law.
The recordings shocked prosecutors as they digested
them over six hours, the source told Reuters.
“That was a big drama,” said the source. “It’s hard
to believe something like this can even happen.”
The recordings set off the investigation that led to
Case 2000, which charges Netanyahu with fraud and breach of trust and Mozes
with bribery.
Harow served two stints as Netanyahu’s chief of
staff before resigning in 2015 amid allegations that Harow improperly advanced
his own business interests while holding the position. He turned state’s
witness against Netanayu in 2017 as part of a plea deal in which Harow
confessed to fraud and breach of trust.
Mozes’s lawyers denied wrongdoing in a written
statement and called prosecutors allegations of bribery an “erroneous and
warped interpretation” of the recordings.
The most serious case against Netanyahu, Case 4000,
did not start with the prime minister. In 2017, Israel’s Securities Authority
(ISA) was investigating Shaul Elovitch, the chairman of the country’s biggest
telecommunications firm, Bezeq Israel Telecom. ISA was investigating whether he
had illegally profited from a 2015 deal in which Bezeq bought out his remaining
shares in a satellite TV company.
Netanyahu, who at the time also served as
Communications Minister, was not a suspect.
One of the key figures in the probe - Shlomo Filber,
director-general of the communications ministry - was picked for the government
job by Netanyahu soon after he took over the communications ministry. The
source said the investigation revealed a secret backchannel between Bezeq and
Filbur, who in 2018 would agree to provide evidence against Netanyahu.
Investigators later found evidence pointing to the
prime minister’s involvement in regulatory moves that prosecutors allege
provided a benefit worth about 1.8 billion Shekels ($500 million) to Bezeq. The
company has denied wrongdoing.
Bezeq controlled a popular news website called
Walla. The indictment alleges that Netanyahu made the regulatory concessions in
return for better coverage of him and his family. It describes a dinner in
which Netanyahu and his wife, Sara, hosted Elovitch and his wife, Iris, a few
weeks before Israel’s 2013 election.
“The defendants agreed that Netanyahu and his wife
will be able to make demands on Mr. and Mrs. Elovitch concerning their media
coverage,” the indictment said.
The Netanyahus allegedly made hundreds of demands
over the next few years for Walla to change headlines, remove negative reports
about them and increase exposure of positive ones.
The Elovitches have been charged with bribery and
obstruction of justice. Shaul Elovitch has also been charged money laundering.
The couple denies any wrongdoing.
The indictment cited a striking example of
Netanyahu’s influence on the news involving a rare interview he gave Walla,
days before a 2015 election.
“Netanyahu was very angry about the questions,” Dov
Gilhar, the journalist who interviewed him, told Israel’s public broadcaster
Kan in March. After the interview, “Netanyahu ripped the neck-mic off, threw it
on the floor, says nothing, gets up, walks into his office and slams the door.”
Gilhar told Kan that he had expected the exclusive
interview to be published quickly, but two days passed before a chopped-down
version ran after being edited without the journalist’s involvement.
The indictment alleges the edits were dictated by
Netanyahu and Nir Hefetz, the media advisor to the prime minister’s family at
the time and his former official spokesman. Hefetz turned state witness in
2018. Netanyahu has been charged with bribery in this case, as well as fraud
and breach of trust.
Netanyahu said on Thursday that quid pro quo
relations between politicians and the media were common, but he was being
singled out.
“They weren’t after the truth,” Netanyahu said of
police and prosecutors. “They were after me.”
Attorney General Mandelblit has rejected Netanyahu’s
accusations. A source close to Mandelblit described him as “very fond of
Netanyahu.”
“But at the end of the day there’s no room for
sentiment,” the source said. “Either the evidence tells the story or it
doesn’t.”