Sara Netanyahu asks High Court to let her appeal in mistreatment case
National Labor Court ruled earlier this month that the PM’s wife can’t be a party to suit involving former employees

Sara Netanyahu, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s wife, petitioned the High Court of Justice on Sunday to allow her to appeal a lower court’s ruling that said she had mistreated a former caretaker and maintenance worker at the Prime Minister’s Residence.
The National Labor Court decided earlier this month that Netanyahu, who was not a party in the case, does not have the right to appeal last year’s ruling. She was also ordered to pay NIS 6,000 ($1,625) in lawyers’ fees to Menny Naftali and Guy Eliyahu.
When Netanyahu turned to the labor court last month, arguing that she should be given a chance to defend herself and produce witnesses and evidence in her favor, the judge said Netanyahu had knowingly decided to avoid the proceedings and should thus not be allowed to appeal.
Though Netanyahu was called in as a witness during the trial, she was not allowed to bring witnesses and testimonies on her behalf, as a defendant would.

Naftali had sued both the state and the Prime Minister’s Residence. His accusations ranged from claims of verbal abuse and what he called irrational demands by Sara Netanyahu regarding the management of the residence to allegations that she instructed him to return bottles to supermarkets and then pocketed the deposits.
The judge wrote in her ruling that “numerous testimonies presented to the court point to an atmosphere of harmful work conditions at the residence due to the behavior of Mrs. Netanyahu and her attitude toward the workers. These included irrational demands, insults, humiliation and outbursts of rage.”
The state was ordered to award Naftali NIS 170,000 in compensation (about $43,735) in February of 2016.
In May of 2016, the same court awarded NIS 120,000 ($31,000) in damages to Eliyahu, ruling that Sara Netanyahu had mistreated him with verbal abuse and unreasonable demands.
Netanyahu rejected the claims of both Naftali and Eliyahu.
State prosecutors are also set to decide whether to indict Sara Netanyahu in a different case. The prime minister’s wife is accused of improper behavior and misuse of state funds relating to the Prime Minister’s Residence, including receiving goods under false pretenses, falsifying documents and breach of trust. Two of the cases involve her using state money to order food for personal use, and a third case involves using public funds to pay for a caretaker for her elderly father.

Last May, police recommended that Netanyahu stand trial on graft allegations.
The Netanyahus are also suspects in another corruption investigation, dubbed Case 1000, surrounding allegations they accepted illicit, expensive gifts — in the form of luxuries such as champagne, cigars, meals — from wealthy businessmen.