Israeli police on Sunday (May 29) recommended bringing criminal charges against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s wife, Sara, Israeli media said, on suspicion she misused state funds at their official and private residences.
Mrs Netanyahu, who has denied any wrongdoing, was questioned by the police fraud squad in December. Any significant political fallout for the prime minister would likely depend on whether state prosecutors accept the police recommendation.
Netanyahu’s spokesman Nir Hefez said. that “Mrs Netanyahu did not break any law” and that these are matters that “do not even come close to breaking the law”.
Police said in a statement they had concluded the investigation and had presented their findings to prosecutors, who would decide what action to take, but unsourced reports in all Israel’s main media outlets said police had recommended that charges be brought.
The suspicions relate to Mrs Netanyahu’s alleged misuse of state funds to pay a caregiver for her ailing father before his death, the hiring of an electrician who did not meet the requirements of a government tender and for opulent meals.
The investigation was prompted by a government auditor’s findings and by information provided by a former chief custodian at the official residence. In February, he won damages for emotional distress after a labour court found that Mrs Netanyahu had repeatedly scolded him and other household staff.
In a separate report by the state auditor last week, the prime minister was criticised over free air tickets that he and his family received for travel abroad when he was finance minister more than a decade ago.
No criminal charges have been brought in that investigation. Netanyahu’s lawyers said he had broken no laws in having travel and expenses covered by organisations that invited him to speak at events raising funds for Israel, or by private individuals associated with those groups.
This will not be Sara Netanyahu’s first police investigation nor court appearance. In 2012 she testified in court over allegations she underpaid and humiliated a household employee.
In 2010, the couple’s former housekeeper, Lillian Peretz, sued demanding compensation for alleged underpayment from Sara Netanyahu. She also claimed the prime minister’s wife “humiliated” her, occasionally shouting and insisting she change clothes during the working day to meet exacting demands for hygiene around the Netanyahu household, Israeli media reported.
Three years ago, Netanyahu and his wife caused a flap when a bedroom for the couple was fitted, at the cost to public coffers of $127,000, onto a chartered El Al flight to London, where the couple attended the funeral of former British leader Margaret Thatcher.
The prime minister’s office responded at the time that he was entitled to a good night’s sleep on an overnight flight after a hectic day.
(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2016