'Drama' due from Zaken's lawyer

Former aide may testify against Olmert in Holyland scandal.

shula zaken 248 88 aj (photo credit: Ariel Jerozolimksi )
shula zaken 248 88 aj
(photo credit: Ariel Jerozolimksi )
Formerprime minister Ehud Olmert's alleged involvement in the Holyland realestate scandal was set to take another twist on Wednesday, with thelawyer for Shula Zaken, the ex-premier's former aide, expected to givea "dramatic" press conference.
Army Radio reported that AttorneyMicha Fetman, who has met Zaken in the US in recent days, was due torespond to claims of her alleged involvement in the affair, and couldspeak of the possibility of Zaken testifying against Olmert.
Meanwhile three other suspects in the case were released to 10 days house arrestWednesday after appealing to the Rishon Lezion Magistrate's Court against their remands. Businessmen Hillel Charni and Avigdor Kelner, as well as former city engineerUri Sheetrit, will be under restrictions, which include a ban on leaving the country.
Olmert is set to be interrogated this week, and his spokesman Amir Dan told The Jerusalem Post on Tuesday evening that police would not notify the ex-prime minister of plans to question him until a few hours before is takes place.
“They won’t coordinate it with us ahead of time,” Dan said.
Olmertwas mayor of Jerusalem when plans for an enlarged Holyland residentialcomplex were approved by the municipality – a procedure police say wasdriven by widespread bribery.
The former prime minister issuspected of accepting large bribes from project backer Charni, inexchange for helping to ensure that the construction plans receivedapproval. Olmert has denied all allegations against him.
OnMonday, the Petah Tikva District Court rejected an appeal by formerdeputy mayor and current city councilman Eliezer Simhayoff against thedecision last week by the Rishon Lezion Magistrate’s Court to extendedhis custody by eight days.
Simhayoff was arrested last week on suspicion of demanding and receiving hundreds of thousands of shekels in bribes. Police said he “divided the cash between himself and others in the municipality.”
His attorney, Moshe Osditsher, argued that there was no logic in holding his client in custody “while the main suspects in the case have been released,” referring to the recent release to house arrest of former Jerusalem mayor Uri Lupalionski and Holyland company accountant Eliyahu Hasson.
Judge Avraham Tal of the Petah Tikva court upheld the remand extension, saying classified case material made available to him by police showed that Simhayoff’s alleged role in the affair was unrelated to those of the suspects who had been released, and that there was no sound basis for releasing him.