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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
World
Joshua Mitnick

Hollywood producer tied to Israeli corruption inquiry

TEL AVIV, Israel _ Hollywood producer Arnon Milchan, long connected to Israel's political elite, has emerged as among the wealthy people whose gift-giving to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is under review as part of a corruption investigation.

The prime minister is under criminal investigation on suspicion of improperly accepting gifts.

Police are looking into whether Milchan provided Netanyahu with a steady supply of expensive Cuban cigars for several years, according to reports this week in Haaretz newspaper and Israel's Channel 2 News Television.

The cumulative value of Milchan's cigar gifts to Netanyahu was estimated to be in the hundreds of thousands of Israeli shekels, according to the reports (a shekel is worth 26 U.S. cents). Milchan also reportedly provided bottles of Champagne for Netanyahu's wife, Sara.

Israeli police have declined to discuss Milchan's involvement in the criminal investigation, the details of which have not been made public.

Netanyahu was interrogated by Israeli police Thursday for several hours in two separate criminal cases. It was the second time in three days that the prime minister was questioned by police in the graft investigation. Details of the second case are unknown to the public.

The prime minister's personal lawyer Friday did not deny that Netanyahu had accepted cigars from Milchan, but said there was nothing criminal in doing so.

"Any reasonable person knows that there is nothing remotely criminal involved when a close friend gives his friend a gift of cigars," Jacob Weinroth said.

Earlier in the week, the prime minister dismissed the police investigation. "There won't be anything because there isn't anything," he said.

Still, the investigation has directed a spotlight on Milchan, 72, a Tel Aviv-born tycoon whose business interests at one point reportedly included 30 companies in 17 countries. He has long wielded influence in politics in IsraEL and abroad, and worked in industries including agribusiness, plastics and weapons.

He is considered one of the most influential producers in the movie business, but is an elusive figure in Hollywood. He rarely gives interviews.

Nonetheless, he has earned respect and admiration from Hollywood A-listers and studio chiefs. Over his long career, he has made movies with Martin Scorsese and Oliver Stone.

Milchan's ties to Israeli elite predate his Hollywood successes. As an Israeli businessmen in the 1960s, he befriended Shimon Peres, at the time an up-and-coming politician who played a central role in building Israel's military-industrial complex. Peres eventually served as prime minister and president of Israel.

Milchan worked with Israel's defense establishment to help in weapons procurement and assisted in building up the country's nuclear program. In a 2013 interview with Israel's Channel 2 investigation show "Uvda," he spoke about his past career as a weapons dealer and a participant in covert operations for Israel. During the program he described himself as a "James Bond" for Israel.

In addition to Netanyahu and Peres, Milchan was also friends with Prime Minister Ehud Olmert.

A spokesperson for Milchan's entertainment company, New Regency Productions, declined to comment on the reports of his gift-giving.

Milchan supplied cigars based on the specifications given by Netanyahu, according to a report on Israel's Channel 2 news Thursday. The cigars cost up to $55 each, and the prime minister might smoke as much as $5,000 worth of cigars a month, according to the report.

A statement this week from the office of Israel's attorney general, Avichai Mandelblit, said a six-month corruption inquiry into the prime minister's dealings had been recently upgraded to a criminal investigation.

During the course of the inquiry, Israeli investigators ruled out allegations about improprieties with election financing and funding of the prime minister's trips abroad.

Though the investigation hasn't undermined his support in his Likud Party or the coalition government, opposition lawmaker Erel Margalit has said the shadow of the criminal investigation will taint the integrity of Netanyahu's decision-making as prime minister.

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(Mitnick is a special correspondent. Times staff writer Jeffrey Fleishman in Los Angeles contributed to this report.)

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