http://www3.haaretz.co.il/eng/scripts/article.asp?id=62577&mador=1&datee=12/02/99Thursday, December 2, 1999
Secret Irangate paper found in home of Nimrodi worker
By Nicole Krau and Zvi Harel
The private investigator suspected of being a potential hit man for Ma'ariv publisher Ofer Nimrodi was yesterday ordered remanded in custody for five more days on suspicion of "being in possession of secret information without authorization." A police search of Oded Ben Dov's home about ten days ago turned up a document which reportedly contains material related to the so-called "Irangate" affair of the mid-1980's. The typewritten document of a few dozen pages, in Hebrew, was examined by various bodies, who determined that only authorized security personnel were permitted to have access to it.
It is now possible that Ofer Nimrodi's father, Ya'akov Nimrodi, a former military attache in Iran during the period of the Shah and an arms dealer, may be summoned for questioning by the police. (See related article, page 2)
Judge Yeshayahu Schneller of the Petah Tikva Magistrate's Court, who ordered Ben Dov remanded for the fifth time, noted that even though the new suspicion is entirely different from the previous ones, it has "an indirect connection to the object of the previous remand requests."
The Irangate affair of 1984-1988 involved covert sales of U.S. arms to Iran via Israel, despite an embargo on such transactions imposed by President Jimmy Carter. Part of the money paid by the Iranians was transferred - in contravention of Congressional directives - to the Contras in Nicaragua.
The investigation of Ben Dov for allegedly being contracted to liquidate Ya'akov Tzur - the state's witness in the wiretapping trial against Ofer Nimrodi, for which Nimrodi eventually served time in prison - was already completed. If not for the newly uncovered document, he would have been released yesterday.
Ben Dov told the police that he received the document from overseas by mail some years ago, from one of his clients whose name he cannot recall. Nor did he say why the document had been sent to him. He faces a possible charge of "aggravated espionage."
In another development, the police are investigating a suspicion that some of the tapes they recently received from Ofer Nimrodi's lawyers supporting their complaint that Nimrodiwas being blackmailed were doctored and partially erased, Ha'aretz learned yesterday from a police source who is knowledgeable of the probe.
Nimrodi's legal team sent the head of the Investigations Branch, Police Major General Yossi Sidbon, a large number of documents and recordings which they say prove that Nimrodi was blackmailed from the beginning of the year by Rafi Pridan and Yigal Tam, the two state's witnesses in the case, and by emissaries they used.
Nimrodi is being held in custody while the police continue to investigate if he conspired to have Pridan murdered.
Yesterday, Nimrodi's chief counsel, Dan Avi-Yitzhak, appealed his client's current nine-day remand to the Tel Aviv District Court. Avi-Yitzhak argued that Nimrodi was unlawfully deprived of his basic constitutional right to be properly represented by a lawyer.
Attorney Shuki Stein, one of Nimrodi's lawyers, stated several weeks ago in a press conference that Nimrodi told him early this year that Pridan was trying to extort money.
Stein said all contacts with the would-be blackmailers were documented by him and others. Nimrodi did not file a complaint about being blackmailed.
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