Attorney general slams ‘disgraceful suggestion’ he was offered bribe

After reports of alleged offer by PM aide to have a judge appointed as AG in return for halting investigation into Netanyahus, Mandelblit rejects idea he could have been bought

Raoul Wootliff is a former Times of Israel political correspondent and Daily Briefing podcast producer.

Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit speaks at a conference in Jerusalem, February 5, 2018. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)
Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit speaks at a conference in Jerusalem, February 5, 2018. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit on Tuesday slammed a suggestion that he may have been offered his position in exchange for closing an investigation into Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s wife Sara, following the publication of an allegation that a now-retired judge had been offered a similar deal.

Responding to the initial report of a quid-pro-quo offer by a former spokesperson of the Netanyahus, Meretz chairwoman Zehava Galon raised the possibility that Mandelblit could also be implicated in a similar agreement.

“Now we only need to ask what was promised to Mandelblit before he was appointed attorney general by Netanyahu and if it is connected to the slow pace of the investigations [against the prime minister],” Galon wrote on Twitter.

Hours earlier, Maariv journalist Ben Caspit broke the news of the suspected late-2015 offer conveyed by Nir Hefetz, longtime confidant of the Netanyahu family, to then-judge Hila Gerstel. Police confirmed the details without naming those involved.

Former prime minister’s spokesman Nir Hefetz at the Herzliya Magistrate’s Court for a libel suit against him and other associates of the prime minister on December 26, 2017. (Flash90)

The attorney general’s office said in response to a query from The Times of Israel: “The attorney general has never been and is not today the address for bribery proposals.”

“Beyond that obvious statement, the question, and the disgraceful suggestion included within it, does not even deserve a response on our behalf,” the brief statement added.

In September, Mandelblit formally notified Sara Netanyahu that he intends to indict her for fraud for allegedly diverting some NIS 360,000 ($102,000) of shekels in public funds for her own use.

Hefetz and Communications Ministry director Shlomo Filber have been in custody since Sunday in connection with the so-called Case 4000, which involves suspected corruption on the part of officers of the Bezeq telecommunications company and possibly Netanyahu himself. The two are in talks with police about prospective agreements to turn state witnesses.

Ombudswoman of the Prosecution, retired Judge Hila Gerstel, attends a Constitution, Law, and Justice, Committee meeting in the Israeli parliament on January 27, 2016. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

Both Hefetz and Netanyahu refuted the police suspicion.

According to Caspit’s account, Hefetz allegedly requested a discreet meeting with an associate of Gerstel’s, strategic adviser Eli Kamir, and told him, “If you go into a closed room with justice Gerstel and check with her, would she commit to closing the investigation against Sara Netanyahu in exchange for her appointment as attorney general? What would her response be?”

Sara Netanyahu is suspected of misusing public funds at the couple’s official residences, as well as using government money to pay for private chefs at family events, a caregiver for her father, and weekend electrical work at the couple’s private home in the coastal town of Caesarea.

Eli Kamir (Hadashot news screenshot)

According to the Ynet news website, the offer was only made to Gerstel after Mandelblit testified before the Public Service Appointments Committee in 2015, vowing that his close relationship with Netanyahu would not affect his legal judgement in any potential proceedings against him.

Mandelblit served as Netanyahu’s cabinet secretary from 2013 to 2016.

Hefetz, who served as the prime minister’s media adviser from 2014 to 2017, denied the allegations, telling his investigators, “It never happened, I deny any attempted bribery involving Gerstel,” Hadashot TV news reported. He also denied he was in talks to turn state witness.

Netanyahu issued a scathing response to the reported deal, denying any connection to Hefetz’s alleged offer. The prime minister is not currently suspected of dispatching Hefetz to issue the offer, according to Hadashot.

“Nir Hefetz never made this absurd offer in front of the prime minister and his wife,” said Netanyahu’s office. “He was never asked to make such an offer, and we cannot believe Hefetz even considered such a thing. Soon the Netanyahu couple will be also blamed for the [1933] assassination of [Zionist leader Haim] Arlosoroff.”

Gerstel shared details of the offer with Supreme Court Judge Esther Hayut shortly after receiving it, Haaretz reported. Gerstel and Hayut, who has since been appointed president of the Supreme Court, are said to be close friends.

Hefetz was named early Tuesday as one of several senior officials and former officials arrested in connection with the Bezeq investigation, which primarily revolves around suspicions that Netanyahu enacted policies potentially worth hundreds of millions of shekels to Shaul Elovitch, the owner of the Walla news website and the controlling shareholder of Bezeq, Israel’s largest telecom company, in exchange for positive coverage on Walla.

Also among those arrested and ordered held for five days were Elovitch, his wife, Iris; and his son Or; along with Filber; Bezeq CEO Stella Handler; and a senior Bezeq executive, Amikam Shorer.

Benjamin and Sara Netanyahu are also expected to be questioned in the probe, reportedly as suspects.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, center, and his wife Sara, center-right, react during a gathering by Likud party members and activists to show support for them as they face corruption investigations, held at the Tel Aviv Convention Center, August 9, 2017. (AFP/Jack GUEZ)

Last week, police recommended that Netanyahu be indicted for fraud, breach of trust and bribery in two other cases.

In Case 1000, Netanyahu and his wife are alleged to have received illicit gifts from billionaire benefactors, most notably the Israeli-born Hollywood producer Arnon Milchan, totaling NIS 1 million ($282,000). In return, Netanyahu is alleged by police to have intervened on Milchan’s behalf in matters relating to legislation, business dealings, and visa arrangements.

Case 2000 involves a suspected illicit quid-pro-quo deal between Netanyahu and Yedioth Ahronoth publisher Arnon Mozes that would have seen the prime minister weaken a rival daily, the Sheldon Adelson-backed Israel Hayom, in return for more favorable coverage from Yedioth.

The prime minister has also been linked indirectly to Case 3000, a large investigation into suspected corruption surrounding a multi-billion-shekel purchase of naval vessels and submarines from a German shipbuilder. While Netanyahu has not been named as a suspect, close associates of his, including two personal aides, have been arrested or questioned.

Netanyahu has denied any wrongdoing in all the cases.

Michael Bachner and Times of Israel staff contributed to this report.

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