His political future becoming increasingly
uncertain, Ehud Olmert was probed for a third time Friday on suspicions
that he illegally accepted at least tens of thousands of US dollars in
cash from an American fundraiser.
Police questioned Olmert
for more than two hours at his Jerusalem residence Friday morning,
Police Spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said, ahead of a crucial
cross-examination of key state witness Morris Talansky by the premier's
lawyers Thursday next week.
The spokesman would give no
details, but Israeli media, quoting law enforcement sources who spoke
on condition of anonymity because the investigation is confidential,
said the detectives confronted the premier with new evidence gathered
in the US.
The new material, they said, includes statements
by witnesses who said they were present in the hotel rooms when
Talansky, a Jewish fundraiser and businessman from Long Island, handed
cash envelopes to Olmert, 62.
Talansky has turned against
Olmert and become the key state witness in the case, giving his version
of events in a pre-trial testimony to a Jerusalem court in late May.
He told that hearing that he gave Olmert some 150,000 dollars, much of
it in cash because he was asked to do so, over a course of 15 years,
when Olmert served as mayor of Jerusalem and as cabinet minister for
the hardline Likud party.
Olmert has admitted to receiving
several envelopes, but with hundreds of dollars only, not thousands or
tens of thousands. His lawyers and spokesmen have said they were
legitimate reimbursements of food and accommodation expenses, paid for
by his hosts when invited to speak at events in the US.
The
rest of the large sums of money he received from Talansky between 1992
and 2005 were donations, used for four election campaigns - when he ran
for mayor of Jerusalem in 1993 and 1998 and for the Likud leadership in
1999 and 2002, Olmert has said. Money received in the years after the
campaigns was used to retroactively cover debts from the campaigns.
Talansky has said he raised the money for ideological reasons, but that
Olmert used much of it for private purposes, including a family
vacation in Italy, upgrading flights from business to first class and
covering hotel costs while on lobbying trips in the US.
Olmert's advisors said that during Friday's questioning the premier
would counter some of the statements made by Talansky and prove them
false.
Talansky has also said that he raised the money for
Olmert 'purely of admiration' and that he 'never had any personal
benefits from this relationship.'
But police are
investigating whether a future tradeoff was expected in return for the
donations. The Israeli Ma'ariv daily on Thursday printed letters
written by Olmert, among others one to top Las Vegas real-estate mogul
Sheldon Adelson dating November 2005, asking the addressees to consider
the services of Talansky's company, Cooltech, which produces mini-bars
for hotels.
The affair broke in early May, when the premier
was first questioned on the suspicions, and has since cast serious
doubt on Olmert's political future.
His largest coalition
partner, the Labour Party, has forced Olmert to agree to holding early
primaries in his own, centrist Kadima, which the party decided this
week to hold in mid-September.
It is still unclear whether
Olmert will run in the primaries, but an associate said this week that
he realizes his chances are slim and that he is inclined not to do so.
His advisors however still hope that the cross-examination of Talansky
by Olmert's lawyers on July 17, will change the negative perception of
the premier and reduce the pressure on him to step down.
He has nevertheless promised to resign if the police investigation materializes into an indictment against him.
And a senior law enforcement official told Ma'ariv on Thursday that he
was certain the case would result in an indictment. Even if prosecutors
lacked sufficient evidence to back up the allegation of bribe-taking,
the indictment could include fraud, breach of trust, money laundering
and violation of Israel's party funding law, he said.
But
State Prosecutor Moshe Lador told reporters before Talansky's May 27
court hearing that it was too early to know whether the case would
develop into an indictment, and accused the Israeli media and law
enforcement sources of 'irresponsible' and inaccurate statements.
Olmert's lawyers have reacted furiously to the constant leaking by law enforcement sources to the Israeli media.
The premier's closest confident, Vice Premier Haim Ramon, said that
even if Olmert did not participate in the Kadima leadership contest, to
be held between September 14-18, or lost, it was possible he could
continue to govern at the head of a transition government until an
agreed date for early elections next winter or spring.