The Jerusalem District Court has been involved in several high-profile cases in Israeli legal history. In 1954–1955,
Benjamin Halevy, then-president of the Jerusalem District Court, presided over the libel trial
State of Israel v. Melchiel Greenwald, more commonly known as the
Kastner trial. The case evolved into a broader examination of
the Holocaust in Hungary, and in his controversial verdict, Halevy acquitted Greenwald of most charges and declared that
Israel Kastner had "sold his soul to the
devil". This statement stirred significant controversy, and Kastner was later assassinated. The Supreme Court subsequently overturned Halevi's decision by a narrow majority of three to two. In 1961, the court hosted the trial of
Adolf Eichmann, a notorious Nazi official war criminal. To accommodate the high-profile nature of the case, proceedings were held at Beit Ha'am in Jerusalem. The trial, which garnered international attention, resulted in Eichmann's conviction and a death sentence, marking a historic moment in both Israeli and global legal history. From 1987 to 1988, the court oversaw the trial of
Ivan Demjanjuk, accused of being a guard at the
Treblinka extermination camp. The trial, held at
Binyanei HaUma (the International Convention Center), comprising
Israeli Supreme Court Judge
Dov Levin and Jerusalem District Court Judges
Zvi Tal and
Dalia Dorner. they concluded with Demjanjuk's conviction to death sentence. However, in 1993, the Supreme Court acquitted Demjanjuk on appeal, citing
reasonable doubt. In 2009, the court handled the trial of former prime minister
Ehud Olmert, who faced charges including bribery, fraud, breach of trust, and falsification of corporate documents. He was ultimately convicted of fraud and breach of trust, receiving an eight-month prison sentence and a 100,000 NIS fine. Most recently, in 2020, the court began the trial of Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu, along with co-defendants
Arnon Mozes, his wife Iris and
Shaul Elovitch, in what has become a landmark case in Israeli politics and law. == Presidents ==