One of the claims the prosecution made that the defense presented was that Netanyahu used Hefetz and Elvovich to secure adoption of his dog Kaya. Hadad asked if there was any special attention in how this news information was sent to Walla. Netanyahu responded that it was sent to everyone.
Hadad then showed a message from ex-editor-in-chief of Walla, Avi Alkalai, in which he wrote that Kaya is not a proper dog’s name. Asked how this affected him, Netanyahu said it didn’t at all.
Hadad then showed a tweet Neatnyahu posted about 10 years ago, which included a picture of the dog. “This was both a humane thing to do, and also a call to the public to save these dogs and find them a home.”
“This site was supposed to be the one [Walla] that gave me special attention - look at the hate!” he charged. An article from Walla at the time had a tweet embedded in it, where the user wrote, “So nice, this one good thing that he did,” to show that this was uncharacteristically animonous to the prime minister. Netanyahu noted that other sites didn’t have such hate in them.
Asked about a press statement sent to all mass media, Netanyahu responded that it was sent to everyone, and that Walla didn’t publish it but other outlets did.
“This is corruption?” he asked.
“This is the big case, the one that halted a whole country for ten years,” he said.