Spain Judge Seeks To Quiz Israeli CEO Over Spyware Scandal
A Spanish judge wants to visit Israel to quiz the CEO of an
Israeli firm behind the Pegasus spyware over a hacking scandal involving the
Spanish premier's phone, a court said Tuesday.
The plans were revealed by Spain's top criminal court as it
lifted a gag order on its investigation into the tapping of mobile phones
belonging to Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez and Defence Minister Margarita Robles
using Pegasus spyware made by Israel's NSO Group.
The probe began after the government filed a complaint on
May 2, with the investigating judge set to quiz a key minister in early July.
Spain has already sent a formal request for international
judicial assistance, known as a letter rogatory, to the Israeli government
asking for information on "different aspects of the software tool",
the court said.
But the judge, Jose Luis Calama, now wants to go there in
person to take a witness statement from NSO Group's chief executive.
Israeli authorities must approve such a request, which could
take months.
"The judge has agreed to expand on the letter rogatory
so that a legal team headed by himself can travel there to take a witness
statement from the CEO of the company that sells the Pegasus programme,"
the court said.
The Pegasus phone-hacking software belongs to NSO Group,
which is based in the Israeli coastal city of Herzliya and headed by CEO Shalev
Hulio, a co-founder of the spy-tech firm.
A spokeswoman for NSO said the group operated within the
bounds of the law.
"NSO operates under a strict legal framework and is
confident that this will be the result any government inquiry will reach,"
she told AFP.
There was no immediate response from the Israeli
authorities.
On Friday, the judge heard testimony from the former head of
Spain's CNI intelligence agency, Paz Esteban, who was sacked on May 10 over the
hacking scandal, the court said.
And on July 5, Calama will hear witness testimony from Felix
Bolanos, a cabinet minister who is known for being close to Sanchez.
When the scandal broke, Bolanos said the Spanish government
was "absolutely certain it was an external attack" but did not know
who was behind it, nor the nature of the information stolen from the ministers'
phones.
Local media have pointed the finger at Morocco, which at the
time was locked in a bitter diplomatic spat with Spain.
The government later said Interior Minister Fernando
Grande-Marlaska's phone had also been targeted.
Pegasus spyware infiltrates mobile phones to extract data or
activate a camera or microphone to spy on their owners.
NSO Group says the software is only sold to government
agencies to target criminals and terrorists with the green light of Israeli
authorities.
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