By: Chaya Abecassis
A dramatic new twist has emerged in the unfolding saga surrounding dismissed IDF Chief Military Prosecutor (Patzarit) Yifat Tomer-Yerushalmi, whose alleged misconduct and subsequent disappearance have gripped the nation. As VIN News reported on Friday, a Tel Aviv resident discovered a cellphone in shallow water along the Tzuk Beach shoreline early Friday morning — the very location where investigators last traced the former prosecutor’s phone before her sudden vanishing act nearly two weeks ago.
Police later confirmed that the device belonged to Tomer-Yerushalmi, adding yet another puzzling layer to an already intricate case that has shaken Israel’s legal and military establishment. According to the information provided in the VIN News report, authorities used advanced forensic tools to unlock the phone, which was found switched on and half-charged, lying partially submerged near the surf.
The discovery, coming just hours after the Tel Aviv Magistrate’s Court ordered her release to ten days of house arrest, has rekindled speculation about the missing gaps in her movements and intentions in the days surrounding her alleged disappearance.
The scene at Tzuk Beach quickly descended into commotion once word spread that the phone might belong to the disgraced former prosecutor. According to the report at VIN News, a brief scuffle erupted between several volunteers equipped with metal detectors, each vying to be the one to personally hand the recovered device over to police. Security forces swiftly intervened to restore order, dispersing the crowd and securing the area for forensic inspection.
The civilian who found the device — a Tel Aviv resident in her 50s — described the surreal moment to police investigators. “I was swimming this morning at Tzuk Beach, and at some point in the shallow water, close to the shore, I saw something that looked like a phone,” she said in her formal statement, as reported by VIN News. “I picked it up and realized it was an iPhone. I immediately got out of the water, turned it on, and saw a picture of the Chief Military Prosecutor. I reported it to the police, and they arrived and summoned me to give testimony.”
Police later confirmed her account, emphasizing that the phone’s state — functioning, charged, and unlocked — was highly unusual given its exposure to saltwater and the length of time it was believed to have been missing. Investigators are now analyzing its contents for potential evidence of obstruction or tampering.
The discovery of the phone marks the latest chapter in a scandal that has rocked Israel’s legal community. VIN News has closely followed Tomer-Yerushalmi’s trajectory from a respected IDF legal officer to a subject of criminal inquiry. Once regarded as one of the most influential women in Israel’s military justice system, she now faces serious allegations of fraud, breach of trust, abuse of office, obstruction of justice, and the unauthorized transmission of classified information.
Her dramatic downfall began earlier this year when internal investigators linked her to the unauthorized leak of security footage from the Sde Teiman detention facility, where IDF soldiers had been accused of mistreating a Hamas detainee. According to the information contained in the VIN News report, she later admitted to approving the leak but claimed she had done so to “defend military law enforcement” from what she described as “false propaganda”.
Following her suspension, Tomer-Yerushalmi disappeared for several hours in an episode that Israeli media initially feared was a suicide attempt. Her car was found abandoned near Tzuk Beach, with a note for her family that read, “Don’t look back.” A nationwide manhunt ensued until she was located alive, prompting intense public scrutiny and a swirl of rumors regarding her mental state and the integrity of the ongoing investigation.
Friday’s court hearing, detailed in the VIN News report, resulted in Tomer-Yerushalmi’s release under stringent conditions. Judge Shelly Kotin of the Tel Aviv Magistrate’s Court ordered that she remain confined to her home for ten days, barred from contacting any individuals connected to the case until December 31, and obligated to appear at all subsequent police interrogations.
In addition, she must post a personal bail of 10,000 shekels, with her brother, Assaf Tomer-Yerushalmi, signing as guarantor. The court further stipulated that she may not leave her residence without special police authorization, except for pre-approved legal consultations.
During the proceedings, Judge Kotin reportedly issued a stern warning about the dangers of witness interference. “Any attempt to contact others involved in this investigation,” she cautioned, “could amount to obstruction of justice.”
As the VIN News report highlighted, her restricted release marks a rare moment in Israeli legal history — a case in which a high-ranking IDF legal authority now finds herself under conditions more commonly reserved for criminal suspects.
The recovered iPhone may prove critical to investigators trying to reconstruct the timeline of events leading up to her disappearance. Law-enforcement sources told VIN News that they are examining whether the device contains communication records, deleted messages, or location data that might clarify whether Tomer-Yerushalmi acted alone in removing evidence or if others helped her evade arrest.
Cyber experts are also analyzing whether the phone’s preservation — despite being submerged — suggests it was deliberately planted rather than accidentally lost. “The fact that the phone was powered on and partially charged is highly irregular,” one investigator told VIN News under condition of anonymity. “Saltwater typically destroys such devices within hours. Either the phone entered the water recently, or someone took steps to ensure it was later ‘found’ intact.”
If evidence of coordination or premeditation emerges, it could expand the investigation well beyond Tomer-Yerushalmi herself, potentially implicating others within the Military Advocate General’s Office or external actors with motives to manipulate the outcome of the probe.
As the VIN News report noted, the case has triggered widespread public debate about accountability within Israel’s legal and defense institutions. Many Israelis view Tomer-Yerushalmi’s fall as emblematic of deeper fissures between the IDF’s operational imperatives and its internal mechanisms of justice.
Public sympathy for her has been limited. Critics argue that her alleged decision to leak classified material — no matter her rationale — undermined the military’s credibility during wartime. Others, however, suggest she has been scapegoated for exposing uncomfortable truths about conditions within detention facilities.
Meanwhile, the optics of her disappearance — and now the recovery of her phone — have fueled speculation about whether Israel’s justice system is prepared to handle misconduct at the highest levels without resorting to public spectacle. Editorials cited by VIN News warn that the ongoing investigation risks becoming less about justice and more about institutional reputation management.
For now, the mystery surrounding Yifat Tomer-Yerushalmi continues to deepen. The recovered phone, lying half-submerged in the waters of Tzuk Beach, may hold the key to unraveling one of the most sensational legal scandals in recent Israeli memory.
As the VIN News report noted, this case has “moved beyond the question of guilt or innocence” and become a test of integrity for Israel’s judicial and military establishment itself. Whether the device yields evidence of conspiracy, exoneration, or further deceit, its reappearance has thrust both investigators and the public into renewed anticipation — and reminded the nation that in Israel’s corridors of power, even the guardians of law are not immune to scandal.



















