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How long will Lieberman survive?

Started by Sheilbh, April 03, 2009, 09:09:17 AM

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Sheilbh

This seems preposterous to have a Foreign Secretary interviewed by the police 3 times within only 2 days of his taking office.
QuotePolice grill Lieberman for second time in three days
By Jonathan Lis and Barak Ravid, Haaretz Correspondents
Tags: israel news

Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman was questioned by police on Friday for the second time since being sworn into his position earlier this week.

Police questioned the foreign minister for more than five hours and said to expect another round in the coming week.

Lieberman was questioned on Thursday for more than seven hours about suspicions of bribery, money laundering, fraud and breach of trust, less than a day after he took office in the new government.
   
National fraud unit detectives questioned the chairman of Yisrael Beiteinu under caution as a probe of his business-dealings proceeds.

Police sources said Lieberman may be indicted within a few months. Lieberman denies any wrongdoing and says the probe is politically motivated.

On Wednesday morning, Lieberman attended the handover ceremony as party colleague Yitzhak Aharonovitch took office as Public Security Minister in charge of the police.

Police have questioned Lieberman several times throughout his political career. Since he was questioned about an alleged money laundering affair in April 2007, detectives have gathered thousands of possibly incriminating documents.

About 1,000 of these documents were confiscated from Lieberman's attorney's office. Some 2,500 additional ones were gathered by the investigation team in Cyprus. These detail the activities of various companies that constituted part of Lieberman and his colleagues' laundering network. They include bank documents listing money transfers and several accounts allegedly opened by Lieberman's associates.

The detectives believe they have evidence tying Lieberman to the money transfers made to the Cyprus accounts.

Tel Aviv Magistrate Benny Sagi studied the evidence compiled by the police in January about the bank accounts attributed to Lieberman in January, concluding that "the inquiry has taken another most significant turn, which increases the suspicion."

Lieberman is not suspected of one-time transfers or of transferring low sums, "but with depositing considerable sums into those accounts, sometimes in millions of shekels," Sagi said. "In some cases we're dealing with orderly, regular monthly deposits."

After compiling the documents earlier this year the fraud unit accelerated the investigation against Lieberman.

In January fraud unit detectives questioned Lieberman's daughter, Michal, on suspicion of being a conduit for funnelling money into his accounts through the company M.L.1, which she owned.

Lieberman's lawyer, Yoav Many, who also serves as the party's legal adviser, and five other confidants were also detained in the current bribery investigation.

Many is suspected of setting up a number of straw companies and opening bank accounts intended for laundering large sums of money.

One of the other detainees, Sharon Shalom, was Lieberman's personal aide when the latter served as national infrastructure minister. Shalom has been serving as CEO of M.L.1. He allegedly managed several straw companies through which funds were funnelled into Lieberman's accounts. "This investigation has been going on for 13 years. In today's investigation Lieberman cooperated and answered investigators' questions," Lieberman's spokeswoman Irena Etinger said.

She said he has long wanted to end the 13-year-long investigation of him, and he has even appealed to the High Court of Justice in an effort to do so.

A spokesperson from the foreign minister's office said that Lieberman "is interested in ending this affair that has continued for 13 years, and hopes that the investigation will be concluded soon and the truth will come out. The foreign minister cooperated with the investigators and answered their questions, and even enjoyed drinking coffee with them."
But I don't know Israeli internal politics at all.  I have a general perception it's pretty corrupt but don't know what the limits are.  So is this survivable?
Let's bomb Russia!

Valmy

Oh jeez everytime a guy enters office he immediately goes under investigation.  Either you have to be corrupt to get elected or the investigating people is a political tactic...or both.
Quote"This is a Russian warship. I propose you lay down arms and surrender to avoid bloodshed & unnecessary victims. Otherwise, you'll be bombed."

Zmiinyi defenders: "Russian warship, go fuck yourself."

Sheilbh

Quote from: Valmy on April 03, 2009, 09:19:54 AM
Oh jeez everytime a guy enters office he immediately goes under investigation.  Either you have to be corrupt to get elected or the investigating people is a political tactic...or both.
12 hours of police questioning, under caution, about allegations of bribery, money laundering and fraud is more than the norm though.

I mean hell we get  OUTRAGED because the Home Secretary's husband charged a couple of porn films to his travelling expenses.
Let's bomb Russia!