Special report: Palestine-Israel
Relations
JERUSALEM, July 8 (Xinhua) -- Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert will be
questioned by the police on Friday morning for the third time since the bribery
offenses he is suspected of were made public, local daily Yedioth Ahronoth
reported Tuesday on its website.
Investigators of the police's National Fraud Investigation Unit will arrive
at the prime minister's official residence in Jerusalem and present him with
questions regarding the suspicions against him, said the report.
Olmert is suspected of illicitly receiving funds before beginning his
tenure as prime minister. According to the suspicions, he received envelopes
containing cash, believed to amount to hundreds of thousands of U.S. dollars,
for a long period of time.
A police team recently traveled to the United States to collect documents
in New York, Washington and Las Vegas as part of a judicial inquiry related to
the case. The two officers, Superintendents Tzachi Havkin and Lior Rice, have
yet to return to Israel.
The key witness in the case, American-Jewish businessman Morris Talansky,
is expected to return to Israel soon in order to undergo a cross examination
next Thursday by Olmert's lawyers, following his pre-trial deposition at the
Jerusalem District Court in May.
On May 27, Talansky told the court that he gave Olmert 150,000 dollars out
of his own pocket, speculating that some of the money went to fund Olmert's
fondness for fine hotels, first-class flights and luxury goods.
Olmert, however, recently estimated in talks with his Kadima activists that
"this deposition will collapse in the cross examination."
On May 23, Olmert was grilled again by police in the investigation against
him. The about one-hour questioning session, the second since the bribery
scandal went public earlier in May, was conducted in Olmert's official residence
in Jerusalem, on which the prime minister and the police have not made public
comments.
Olmert, who has acknowledged receiving money from Talansky but claimed the
funds were used for election campaigns, denies any wrongdoing in the case and
said he would resign if indicted.
The investigation is the fifth into Olmert's conduct since he became prime
minister two years ago. No charges have been filed and one of the cases has been
closed.