Mandelblit announced his final indictment on November 21, but could not file it with the courts until the immunity request process was concluded.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu requested on Sunday that the Jerusalem District Court postpone the opening of his trial, set for March 17.His lawyer, Amit Hadad, explained in a short video that the request was merely for a technical delay to receive additional evidentiary materials that they had sought from the prosecution months ago.


Generally, the first hearing of a trial is used specifically for resolving such issues, such that it would be unexpected for the court to grant a delay to resolve the issues outside of court.Attorney-General Avichai Mandelblit has previously told Netanyahu's lawyers that they have already received either all or nearly all of the evidence that is due to them, and that any remaining evidentiary disputes should be resolved at the March 17 hearing.The three judge panel for the public corruption trial includes: Rivkah Friedman-Feldman, Moshe Bar-Am and Oded Shaham.
A decision on the opening date for the trial and for the panel had been stalled since the indictment against Netanyahu was filed on January 28.Although there was initially greater potential for the trial to open before the March 2 elections, it eventually became clear that the court wanted the trial opening postponed until after election day.Netanyahu officially became the first sitting prime minister in Israel’s history to be indicted on January 28 when Mandelblit filed an indictment with the Jerusalem District Court against him for bribery, fraud and breach of trust, just hours after Netanyahu withdrew his immunity request. Read more at JPost