Former GSS ("Shabak") head, Carmi Gillon, said explicitly in an interview broadcast on Israeli Television on October 8th that Avishai Raviv worked for the GSS.
IMRA asked the Office of the Spokesman of the Ministry of Justice if there are plans to prosecute Avishai Raviv for false testimony at the Amir brother's trial on 21 July. Raviv testified that "I did not cooperate with the GSS ("Shabak").
The Spokesman's Office advised that they could not comment on the matter since this is now the subject of a filing before the Supreme Court and the Ministry has yet to reply.
When news of Raviv's activities as an agent provocateur was first made public then candidate Binyamin Netanyahu demanded "a full, thorough, and exhaustive investigation into the Raviv affair. There must be no cover-up. Even if only a fraction of the provocative activities attributed to Raviv are true, they constitute a grave danger to democracy. There must be an investigation and it must come now, with no delays and no excuses" (The Jerusalem Post 20 November 1995).