Olmert Chief Witness Married to Deputy Attorney General

I don’t know if you could ever find a stranger conflict of interest in Israeli law and politics. Ehud Olmert’s former law partner and business associate, Uri Messer, is presently singing to Israeli police and the attorney general about his involvement in the funds Morris Talansky raised for Olmert. From what I’ve read, all funds collected were passed on to Messer who then appropriated them. That’s why Messer is such a crucial figure in the investigation.

Ynet and my blog reader Amir have noted that Messer is married to Davida Lachman-Messer, the deputy attorney general. I’ve never heard of a a chief witness in a bribery investigation being married to a senior officer in the investigating agency. Wow, is that a conflict if there ever was one! Here in the U.S. this would be a perfect opportunity to appoint a special counsel in order to remove the conflict from the AG’s office. Or else you’d have to completely quarantine the deputy AG from involvement with the case. And how could you?

I wonder how, or if Israeli law deals with such an issue. I’m hoping Shamai Leibowitz, a former Israeli lawyer and reader of this blog, can enlighten us on this.

Shamai has translated the relevant portions of Israeli penal law dealing with bribery charges:

Israeli Penal Code (1977):

Bribery Offenses:

290. (a) A public servant who receives a bribe in return for an action related to his work – is punishable by a [maximum] sentence of 7 years or 7 years and a fine of 10,000 Liras.

(b) In this section, “public servant” – including an employee of a corporation performing a public service.

293. In bribery offense, it is irrelevant –

(1) if it was money, or something with monetary value, or service or another benefit;

(2) if it was given for the commission or an omission of an action, delay of an action, expediting an action, slowing an action, giving preference or discrimination;

(3) if it was for a specific action or for general favoritism;

(4) if it was for an act by the receiver of the bribe or for the receiver’s influence on another person;

(5) if it was given by the giver of the bribe or by another; if it was given to the receiver or to another person on behalf of the receiver; if it was from the outset or in retrospect; or if the person benefiting from the bribe was the receiver of another person;

(6) if the receiver’s status was one of authority or service; if it was permanent or temporary or it was general or for a specific purpose; if it was for pay or without pay; if it was in volunteer work or fulfilling a legal duty;

(7) if it was received in order to stray from the obligations in fulfilling the receiver’s duties or if it was for the performance of an action that the receiver was obligated to perform according to law.

I’m a little unclear as to whether or not there’s a contradiction between sections 290 and 293 in that 290 requires “an action in return for” the bribe. While section 293 seems to say it doesn’t need to be in return for various types of actions. But other Israeli readers tell me that section 290 is more relevant and there doesn’t need to be a specific quid pro quo for a crime. However, the prosecution will have to prove that the money went directly into Olmert’s pocket rather than into his election campaign (as the statute of limitations would’ve run out on this crime). That’s why Messer is crucial to the case.

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Brit Tzedek Calls Israeli Foreign Ministry Report ‘Utter Falsity’

Yediot Achronot Hebrew headline from article attacking Israeli refusenik groupsHeadline of scurrilous Yediot article: “U.S. Palestinian Groups Bankroll Refuseniks” (scan courtesy Amir Terkel)

Thanks especially to Amir Terkel (and also Judith Kolokoff), I was the first news source outside Israel to report that Israel’s Los Angeles consul general, Ehud Danoch, smeared Brit Tzedek, Combatants for Peace, and Breaking the Silence, accusing their national tours of being “bankrolled by Palestinian groups.” Now, Brit Tzedek’s national leadership has answered the foreign ministry report with a letter of their own which I quote in full:

January 30, 2007

Consul General Ehud Danoch
Consul for Media and Pubic Affairs Gilad Millo
Consulate General of Israel
6380 Wilshire Blvd
Los Angeles, CA 90048

Dear Sirs:

We write to express profound dismay about a report transmitted by your office to the Israeli Foreign Ministry and to all of Israel’s representatives in North America condemning the tour sponsored by Brit Tzedek v’Shalom featuring representatives of the Israeli-Palestinian group Combatants for Peace. As covered by YNET and Maariv, your report also called for actions against these individuals, whose military service has turned them into conscientious objectors, to stop “their negative effect on Israel’s image.”

As a supporter of Israel, Brit Tzedek v’Shlaom celebrates Israel as a vibrant democracy, whose citizens have not only diverse opinions but the right to express them publicly. That groups like Combatants for Peace and Breaking the Silence speak out against the current government’s policy of occupation, or that they might hold minority positions, does not diminish the obligation of your government to acknowledge their right to be heard.

The Israelis in these groups have dutifully served to protect Israel and the principles for which it stands. It is from their firsthand military experience that they have come to the realization shared by many Israelis, Palestinians and Americans alike, that only a diplomatically-negotiated two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict will bring real peace and security to Israel,.

Like Israelis, American Jews are also overwhelmingly pro-Israel and have a wide-range of views about how to ensure the future of the Jewish homeland.

We certainly share Combatants for Peace’s concerns about the negative impact of the occupation on Israel. Yet a primary goal in our hosting the Combatants for Peace tour is to stimulate discussion in Jewish communities across our nation of the many ways to connect to and work on behalf of Israel.

As you are already aware, we are sponsoring a presentation by Combatants for Peace in Los Angeles on January 31st at the Skirball Center. We would be honored to welcome you and would also be pleased to meet with you privately to discuss how the exchange of ideas presents opportunity to strengthen the American Jewish community’s support for Israel.

Sincerely,

Marcia Freedman, President
Diane M. Cantor, Executive Director

In my opinion, the reply was entirely too polite considering the mendacity in the diplomatic report as quoted by Yediot. I don’t know how Brit Tzedek plans to pursue this matter. I hope they do. It deserves to be reported in JTA, the Forward and the Jewish Journal (L.A.’s Jewish paper) so that American Jews know about the mendacity of the L.A. foreign ministry staff. I have personally contacted editors at the Journal and Forward to inform them of the story in case they didn’t know. We’ll see what, if anything they say.

It’s instructive to hear what an Israeli refusenik himself has to say about this scandalous document. Amir Terkel, who conveyed the original Hebrew version of the story to me writes:

I can speak for many of the Israeli refuseniks who I met, and am one of myself, that this actually is not a deterrent, but more a confimation that the message is going out.

This is Amir Terkel’s scan of the original Hebrew article and the sanitized English version on the Ynetnews site.

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