Israel Police Pegasus surveillance list revealed
No one was immune: for the first time a list of dozens of
citizens who were targeted by Israel Police, having their phones hacked by NSO
spyware and their personal information swiped and filed away. The surveillance
was conducted to phish for intelligence even before any investigation had been
opened against the targets, and without judicial warrants. Israel Police said
in response that its people are “cooperating with the Attorney General of
Israel’s examination team.”
The list which
reached Calcalist includes the CEOs of the ministries of transport, finance and
justice at the time, Keren Turner, Shai Babad and Emi Palmor, respectively. It
also includes leaders of the protests organized by disability rights groups and
Israelis of Ethiopian descent, as well as mayors Miriam Feirberg of Netanya,
Yoram Shimon of Mevaseret Zion, Yaakov Peretz of Kiryat Ata and Moti Sasson of
Holon.
In addition, spyware was installed on the phone of witnesses
and some of those interrogated as part of Case 4000 and those involving
communication conglomerate Bezeq for which former Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu is also standing trial. People who had their phones hacked include,
Iris Elovich, indicted on bribery charges in Case 4000, former Ministry of
Communications CEOs Shlomo Filber and Avi Berger, Bezeq CEOs Stella Hendler and
Dudu Mizrahi, Walla CEO Ilan Yeshua, former Walla editor-in-chief Aviram Elad
and other journalists at Walla.
The family of former Prime Minister Netanyahu and his inner
circle were also targeted, including his son Avner Netanyahu, and advisors
Topaz Luk and Yonatan Urich. Businessman Rami Levy was also hacked, as was the
chairman of the workers union at Israel Aerospace Industries, Yair Katz, son of
Member of Knesset, Haim Katz.
The bland term used by police for these activities was
“technological and data oriented policing,” but Calcalist reveals that the use
of Pegasus wasn’t local or limited to a small number of cases. This became one
of the most useful tools implemented by police to gather intelligence.
Special operations members of the police’s cyber-SIGINT unit
have been penetrating the phones of citizens secretly and without judicial
warrants, taking control of them with Pegasus against the law and with the
understanding that judges wouldn’t approve such activity.
In every democratic country protests are considered to be an
imperative right to voice one’s opinion and an important tool to balance the
power of the ruling government. However, for Israel Police, protests and demonstrations,
regardless of the reason behind them, were treated as a real threat.
Analysts at the cyber-SIGINT unit who implemented the
illegal orders to track protesters were told that the goal of the mission was
to collect early intelligence due to the possible threat to public order. The
collecting of intelligence information (it is important to emphasize that such
information cannot be used in court unless it was whitewashed later on through
different methods) was done while the police was headed by Roni Alsheikh, the
former deputy head of Shin Bet. Yoav Hasan was the commander of the SIGINT unit
at the time, with Yosef Kachlon heading the technologies unit. Both Hasan and
Kachlon joined the police from the military’s Unit 8200.
Police chiefs claimed at the time that they require early
information regarding the plans of protest organizers as only then would they
be able to prevent the blocking of main junctions during rush hour or from
protests turning violent. SIGINT collected everything: the location of the
protests, the plan for the protests, how many people will attend, and which
junctions might be blocked. The unit prepared an operational plan for every
protest so that “there wouldn’t be any surprises.”
The information that anti-Netanyahu protesters were also
tracked was revealed in Calcalist two weeks ago. It can now be revealed that
disability rights group heads, protesting for the increase of stipends for the
disabled, and those leading the protests of Israelis of Ethiopian descent, who
ironically were protesting against the way they are treated by police, were
among those tracked. Pegasus was also installed in the phones of settlers on
the West Bank on the eve of outpost evacuations.
The intrusive tool was also used against some of the most
senior government officials, in some cases to determine whether activities like
leaking information to journalists had taken place.
Keren Turner, for example, who was the CEO of the Ministry
of Transport and then the CEO of the Ministry of Finance, both under minister
Israel Katz. Someone suspected that Turner was leaking secret documents to
journalists and police began tracking her phone with Pegasus.
That was also the fate of the CEO of the Ministry of Finance
who preceded Turner, Shai Babad. The fact that he held one of the most powerful
positions in the country and had a strong political connection with heads of
government didn’t help him. He was also suspected to have leaked information to
journalists and his phone was hacked in order to find incriminating exchanges.
The CEO of the Ministry of Justice, who is in constant touch
with police, was tracked as well. Emi Palmor, who served as the ministry’s CEO
for five years, was ousted from the role in 2019.
The Bezeq case began as an investigation of the Israel
Securities Authority, with Case 4000 branching off later on, focusing on the
allegedly unlawful relationship between Shaul Elovich, who controlled Bezeq at
the time, and Benjamin Netanyahu. The intelligence department at the ISA has a
good relationship with police’s SIGINT unit and to its request the phone of
Shlomo Filber, the CEO of the Ministry of Communications at the time, was
hacked. Thanks to the surveillance, text exchanges between Filber and Bezeq CEO
Stella Hendler which raised suspicion that he was leaking her documents, were
revealed, leading to Hendler’s cell phone also being tracked.
Police went one further and also penetrated the phone of
Dudu Mizrahi, the deputy CEO of Bezeq at the time who currently serves as the
company’s CEO. Mizrahi was hacked not because he was suspected of any
wrongdoing, but rather to assess the credibility of the testimony he provided.
All of these hacks took place in order to acquire intelligence and without any
warrants or judicial approval.
During the investigation into Case 4000, police hacked into
phones to check whether the two main witnesses it targeted, former Walla CEO
Ilan Yeshua, and former Walla editor-in-chief Aviram Elad, were being put under
pressure.
Additional witnesses in the case were also hacked, including
the phones of former Ministry of Communications CEO Avi Berger, and additional
journalists at Walla. In these cases as well, the goal of the surveillance was
to determine the credibility of their testimonies and make sure they weren’t
hiding any additional information.
SIGINT also broke into a phone listed under the name of
Avner Netanyahu, one of the sons of the former prime minister. Police
discovered that outgoing messages were written in femanine gender, which led
police to think that the phone was being used by the former prime minister’s
wife Sara Netanyahu. The phones of the former prime minister’s media advisors
Topaz Luk and Yonatan Urich were also targeted, as was a cell phone belonging
to Iris Elovich, wife of Shaul, who also faces charges in the case.
In these cases as well, the hacks were initiated in order to
collect intelligence. They were done without judicial warrants and the
information collected was forwarded to investigators, without revealing the
means used to acquire it.
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