Israeli police on Tuesday said, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu should be charged with bribery, opening the way for what could be the biggest challenge yet to the right-wing leader’s political survival.
But Netanyahu called the allegations baseless and vowed to complete his fourth term in office.
It will be up to Israel’s attorney general to decide whether to file charges, a process that could take weeks if not months.
The recommendations, which police made public on Tuesday night, were at the more serious end of the range of charges that had been expected to be leveled against Netanyahu in two criminal investigations that have gone on for more than a year.
One of the cases, known as Case 1000, alleged the “committing of crimes of bribery, fraud and breach of trust by Benjamin Netanyahu.”
In a detailed statement, police named Arnon Milchan, a Hollywood producer and Israeli citizen, and Australian businessman James Packer, saying that for nearly a decade, from 2007 to 2016, they gave gifts to Netanyahu and his family.
In all, the merchandise was worth more than one million shekels ($280,000), the statement said. Any legal proceedings would likely focus on whether political favors were sought or granted.
Netanyahu’s lawyers said the presents were simply tokens of friendship.
The second, Case 2000, also alleged “bribery, fraud and breach of trust by the prime minister” and by the publisher of the biggest-selling Israeli newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth, Arnon Mozes. The two men, police said, discussed ways of slowing the growth of a rival daily newspaper, Israel Hayom, “through legislation and other means”.
Netanyahu, who has denied wrongdoing, has been questioned several times by police since the start of 2017.