ON
← Back to feed
ILCrimeOverlooked from the left5 days ago

Netanyahu denounces ‘police state’ trial as his cross-examination ends after over a year

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu denounced his ongoing criminal trial as a 'political trial' akin to those conducted in a 'police state,' comparing the prosecution to the former East German Stasi. His cross-examination concluded after more than a year of hearings, with the court shortening the session due to Netanyahu's request to leave early for diplomatic and security reasons. The case centers on alleged fraud and breach of trust related to a deal involving media outlets in 2014.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday claimed his associates have likened the prosecution to the former East Germany’s “Stasi,” and accused them of conducting a political trial like that in a “police state,” during an outburst in court, as his cross-examination in his criminal trial ended after over a year of hearings, amid repeated delays.

Judges shortened Tuesday’s hearing to 2:30 p.m. instead of 4:30 p.m., as the prime minister requested to leave early on apparent diplomatic and security grounds. On Wednesday, the next stage is set to begin, in which Netanyahu’s defense lawyers will ask follow-up questions in their redirect examination.

Tuesday’s hearing centered on Case 2000, in which the premier is charged with fraud and breach of trust over allegations he planned an arrangement with Yedioth Ahronoth publisher Arnon Mozes under which Netanyahu would receive favorable media coverage from the publication and, in return, advance legislation to weaken Yediot’s rival newspaper Israel Hayom in 2014.

That paper, bankrolled by now-deceased American billionaire Sheldon Adelson and previously considered very pro-Netanyahu, is handed out for free and has seriously hurt Yedioth’s circulation figures over the years.

The bill, which would have required newspapers to charge a minimum price, passed the first of three readings in the Knesset in November 2014, apparently catching Netanyahu off guard.

Get The Times of Israel's Daily Edition

by email and never miss our top stories

By signing up, you agree to the terms

Weeks after the bill was advanced, in December 2014, Netanyahu dissolved the Knesset, ushering in new elections and thwarting any efforts to further advance the legislation. The agreement with Mozes was never implemented.

Activists protest against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu outside the Tel Aviv District Court, where Netanyahu is testifying in his corruption trial, on June 16, 2026. (Avshalom Sassoni/Flash90)

During Tuesday’s examination, state attorney prosecutor Yehonatan Tadmor asked Netanyahu to explain his statements to investigators in Case 2000, questioning his version of events. During a line of questioning in court, Netanyahu denied that he was interested in Yedioth Aharonoth’s coverage of him.

Tadmor then presented Netanyahu with a quote from his police questioning, in which the prime minister told investigators that he is in “the middle of a war” and has to “buy time.”

“He already took the Knesset from me; now I have to think about how I fight him. What I’m doing in the upcoming election campaign,” Netanyahu was quoted as saying, referring to Mozes.

Netanyahu told Tadmor that by “buy time,” he was referring to the “slander against the [Netanyahu] family,” to which the prosecutor responded, “As in, coverage?”

“This isn’t coverage; it’s slander,” Netanyahu insisted, saying his treatment in the media was “beyond the pale.”

Tadmor also quoted Netanyahu about his description of his relationship with Mozes with the line, “Keep your friends close and your enemies closer,” and as a “cold war as opposed to a hot war.”

“Noni Mozes is a political rival with very hostile tools all the time, and even with them, there needs to be a certain limit,” Netanyahu responded, adding that Yedioth Aharonoth had “crossed the line” ahead of the 2015 elections.

He claimed he used the phrase, “Keep your friends close…” because he wanted to “contain” his “war” with the newspaper so that it would not “breach” acceptable boundaries and attack his family.

Tadmor then questioned Netanyahu over the defense’s claims that prosecutors intentionally filed an indictment against the prime minister while he was visiting Washington, sparking an angry outburst by the premier.

“You are collecting targets! You will spend your whole life in court! There has never been anything like what you did to me! This is shameful. What you did to me, you haven’t done to any other public figure! You brought everyone into a network of intimidation and terror! Everyone I speak with says to me, what are you, a police state? Stasi? What you did here is bring Netanyahu’s head; you caught nothing! What we have here is political persecution like a police state!”

Arnon (Noni) Mozes arrives to the courtroom at the Tel Aviv District Court for the ongoing corruption trial against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, May 6, 2025. (Reuven Kastro/POOL)

“You can speak politely, but you didn’t catch anything. It is a shocking injustice,” Netanyahu declared. “You criminalized every connection. I couldn’t think it was bribery. What you are seeing is Mozes acting in his interests, not in the public interests.”

Tadmor has repeatedly put it to Netanyahu that he was coordinating with Mozes to pass the Israel Hayom bill, while Netanyahu, for his part, insists that there was no such arrangement and that he opposed the legislation.

Netanyahu has sought a pardon from President Isaac Herzog, who insisted on negotiating a deal with the prosecution. L…

Read the full article at The Times of Israel
Source document: Case 2000

1 reports

The Times of IsraelIndependentRight5 days ago
Netanyahu denounces ‘police state’ trial as his cross-examination ends after over a year

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu denounced his ongoing criminal trial as a 'political trial' akin to those conducted in a 'police state,' comparing the prosecution to the former East German Stasi. His cross-examination concluded after more than a year of hearings, with the court shortening the session due to Netanyahu's request to leave early for diplomatic and security reasons. The case centers on alleged fraud and breach of trust related to a deal involving media outlets in 2014.

Bias read (Right): The article presents Netanyahu's claims without counterbalance, using direct quotes from him and emphasizing his accusations against the prosecution. It frames the trial as politically motivated based on Netanyahu's statements, with minimal contextualization of the charges or opposing perspectives.

Official sources cited

Go to the primary sources (1)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.