Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's wife, Sara, has reached a plea bargain in a fraud case over allegedly misusing state funds to order catered meals.
Under the agreement, she will pay the state 45,000 shekels ($12,400) in reimbursement and a 10,000-shekel fine while admitting a lesser charge.
According to the original indictment, Sara Netanyahu, along with a government employee, fraudulently obtained from the state more than $100,000 for hundreds of meals supplied by restaurants, bypassing regulations that prohibit the practice if a cook is employed at the prime minister's residence.
The deal was reached in a six-month-long mediation process and will go into effect after it is ratified by a judge, the radio reported.
A spokesman for the Netanyahu family declined to comment. Prosecutors were not immediately available for comment.
The prime minister is embroiled in legal woes of his own – three corruption cases in which he has denied wrongdoing – and a political crisis that could force him to call for a new national election.
In February, Israel's attorney general said he intended to file fraud and bribery charges against Benjamin Netanyahu, pending a pre-trial hearing. That session is set for October.