In a Facebook post, Netanyahu railed against the “false accusations against me and my wife that seek to topple the Likud and bring the left to power.”
Netanyahu criticized local media who jumped at the opportunity to ridicule Sara, just a month-and-a-half ahead of scheduled snap elections which will pit Netanyahu’s ruling Likud party against a united center-left front.
"All of this aims to detract attention from what is really important – who will lead the country," he wrote.
But Israeli media did seize the chance to make fun of Sara. A frequent target for left-leaning Haaretz, she is often portrayed as out of touch and extravagant.
In the wake of the revelation, Haaretz published a cartoon of her seated in her living room, watching the recent spat between Israel and Hezbollah on television, surrounded by empty bottles and ordering her staff to take the bottles to the supermarket.
Path now open for police to question Sara Netanyahu on bottle deposit scandal http://t.co/RRqrBqo0nt http://ift.tt/16bN55J
— Haaretz.com (@haaretzcom) January 31, 2015
In 2013, the Netanyahu couple returned $1,000 from used bottles to the state, according to a spokesperson for the prime minister’s office. However, Meni Naftali, a former manager for the prime minister’s residence, alleges in a lawsuit for wrongful treatment that the actual sum was much higher.
He claims that Sara made around $6,000 over the course of four years during her husband’s first term in office.
“She would collect the bottles obsessively,” Naftali told Yedioth Ahronoth daily, in an interview published on Friday. "'Here’s a bottle, here’s another bottle.'"
Haaretz reported that the matter has been turned over to the Attorney General’s Office.
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