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Tuesday, September 7, 2010
Israeli probe finds Austrian billionaire Schlaff behind illicit money transfer to Sharon family

Israeli probe finds Austrian billionaire behind illicit money transfer to
Sharon family
Investigation reveals Martin Schlaff is behind the $4.5m funneled to the
former PM's family; millions more went to company believed to be controlled
by Lieberman.
By Gidi Weitz Haaretz Published 01:29 07.09.10
www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/israeli-probe-finds-austrian-billionaire-behind-illicit-money-transfer-to-sharon-family-1.312606

VIENNA - Austrian billionaire Martin Schlaff is behind the transfer of $4.5
million to the bank accounts of Gilad and Omri Sharon, an investigation
conducted by Israel's national fraud squad has concluded.

The investigators are therefore recommending that Schlaff be indicted on
bribery charges, and that Gilad and Omri, the sons of former prime minister
Ariel Sharon, be charged with serving as conduits for a bribe.

The investigation began in 2003, but was only recently concluded. Its
findings have been sent to the head of the police's investigations
department, Yoav Segalovich, and State Prosecutor Moshe Lador.

"This is one of the gravest corruption affairs investigated by the fraud
squad," said Commander (ret. ) Nahum Levi, who headed the investigation. "It
involved transfers of millions of dollars to the Sharon family. This was a
particularly complex investigation because in it, an attempt was made to
blur the source of the money via transfers from different countries of the
world. Now, the file is supposed to go to the prosecution for an effort to
translate the evidence in this grave case into an indictment."

For years, the Austrian authorities refused to let Israel depose Schlaff,
claiming that the Israeli police lacked sufficient evidence to justify such
a step. But Israeli officials suspected that another motive hid behind the
official excuse: Schlaff has excellent connections with Austria's top
political leaders.

"The request [to Austria] for legal cooperation took a very long time,
compared to other places in the world," said attorney Irit Kahan, the former
head of the international division of the State Prosecutor's Office. "And
during the course of submitting the requests, there were a number of court
decisions in Austria that made me wonder."

Only in 2006, after repeated requests, did the Austrians finally agree to
let Israel depose Schlaff. But then, Schlaff began playing games with his
interrogators. Viennese sources familiar with the tycoon's tactics said that
one morning, for instance, the Israeli investigators showed up at Austrian
police headquarters in Vienna and waited for hours for Schlaff to arrive.
Then, at about noon, one of Schlaff's lawyers showed up and said his client
would not be coming that day.

A Haaretz investigation into Schlaff's affairs also uncovered a long list of
other Israeli public figures who benefited from his millions. For instance,
Schlaff gave his friend Aryeh Deri hundreds of thousands of dollars to
finance the former Shas chairman's defense against bribery charges, for
which he was ultimately convicted.

In particular, Schlaff recruited a friend, Swiss lawyer Hans Baumgartner, in
2000 and financed his purchase of material relating to Yaakov Shmuelevitz,
the state's key witness against Deri. This material served as the basis for
Deri's unsuccessful bid to get the Supreme Court to grant him a retrial.

According to information obtained by Haaretz, Schlaff spent hundreds of
thousands of dollars to buy material on Shmuelevitz in Switzerland.

In the 1990s, the Schlaff family also ran a New York-based nonprofit called
the Jaslo Foundation, which gave money to various Israeli organizations. But
the largest donation of all went to the Legal Defense Fund, which financed
Deri's legal team.

Jaslo also gave $50,000 to help finance Ehud Olmert's successful defense
against charges that, while serving as treasurer of the Likud party in 1988,
he had been involved in a fictitious invoice scam. In reporting its
activities to the American tax authorities, the foundation listed this
donation as "support for Jewish causes."

The Haaretz investigation also obtained interesting testimony given by
attorney Norbert Steger, a former vice chancellor of Austria, to a French
court in April 2008. Steger was testifying about the years when he served as
chairman of a Lichtenstein-based company that owned shares in the Oasis
casino in Jericho, which opened in 1998, five years after the Oslo Accord
was signed. Steger said that millions of dollars were taken from the
company's account to create "a good atmosphere regarding the casino."

One name that appeared in Steger's testimony was Louise Weissglas, who
received payments totaling $280,000 from the casino between August 2001 and
March 2002, ostensibly for consulting services. Her husband, Dov Weissglas,
was serving at the time as a legal adviser to the company that ran the
casino. However, these payments were made before Weissglas began working in
the Prime Minister's Office under Sharon.

Another name mentioned by Steger was Shimon Sheves, who served as director
general of the Prime Minister's Office under prime minister Yitzhak Rabin.
In November 2003 - at a time when the casino had already been shut down due
to the second intifada - Sheves was paid $60,000.

A few months ago, Haaretz discovered, Israeli police investigators deposed
some of Schlaff's employees in the context of their probe of Foreign
Minister Avigdor Lieberman. This followed the discovery that in August 2001,
the Robert Placzek lumber trade company, which is owned by Schlaff, had
transferred $650,000 to a Cypriot company, Trasimeno Trading, which police
suspect was controlled by Lieberman.

At the time, Lieberman was serving as national infrastructure minister in
Sharon's government.

The employees told the investigators that the money was given to the Cypriot
company to buy a sawmill in Ukraine.

Schlaff's Israeli attorney, Navot Telzur, responded that his client "has no
intention of commenting on matters that, according to the paper, are being
investigated by the police." Gilad Sharon's attorney, Micha Pettman,
declined to comment.

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