Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Sara Netanyahu investigated for alleged witness tampering

The probe follows a television program’s exposé on text messages from the Israeli prime minister’s wife.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks to the press alongside his wife, Sara, before boarding a plane to Washington, D.C., where he addressed Congress and met with President Joe Biden and other officials, July 22, 2024. Photo by Amos Ben Gershom/GPO.

Israeli prosecutors confirmed on Thursday that they are conducting a criminal investigation of Sara Netanyahu, the wife of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, for alleged witness tampering and obstructing judicial proceedings in 2019.

The prosecutors confirmed the existence of the probe to opposition lawmaker Naama Lazimi of The Democrats party, Ynet reported Sunday. The investigation concerns reports that Mrs. Netanyahu had ordered an employee to harass or malign a witness in her husband’s corruption trial.

To many critics of Netanyahu, the probe against his wife is a fresh indication of a pattern of abuse of power. To the couple’s many advocates, it is indicative of a vendetta they believe is being waged against them in the media and the State Attorney’s office.

Uvda, the flagship investigative journalism program of Israel’s Channel 12, in December, reported that Sara Netanyahu ordered a subordinate to “aggressively go after” the former secretary of billionaire Arnon Milchan, a witness against the prime minister.

“We need to go aggressively after Hadas Klein, Arnon Milchan’s secretary, who has been slandering us for years, lying, maligning and acting unconscionably’,” Sara Netanyahu wrote in a text message to the subordinate, according to Uvda.

Uvda is not cooperating with police in the investigation, and has not divulged the evidence for the text message, according to Ynet.

Sara Netanyahu has said that nothing in the Uvda exposé proves or indicates witness tampering and that the show was an attempt at character assassination.

Benjamin Netanyahu called it an attempted political persecution. He has denied all allegations attributed to him in his ongoing trial on bribery and breach-of-trust charges.

Panelists at JNS Summit say educational reforms, new media voices and opposition to extremism are laying the groundwork for broader Middle East normalization with Israel.
The victim was identified as Raed Abu al-Qi’an of Hura in the Negev.
Regavim’s Naomi Kahn challenges U.N. ‘settler violence’ narrative at JNS Summit.
It’s “absurd and tragic that there are U.N. experts who are supposed to care about the rights of women, especially to combat sexual violence, and she’s one of the world’s major deniers of sexual violence against Israeli women,” Hillel Neuer told JNS.
“We’re going to keep pushing, and we’ll get there,” Rabbi Josh Joseph told JNS. “We’ll get to the $1 billion that we need.”
“We don’t need it. We need to teach real, honest history,” Sonja Shaw, school board president of Chino Valley Unified School District, told JNS.
Benny Gantz, JNS editor-in-chief Jonathan S. Tobin, Gilad Erdan, Mosab Hassan Yousef, Nissim Black and leading voices in security, diplomacy, media, law and Jewish communal affairs headline the summit’s third day in Jerusalem.