In the cross-examination, he got into trouble again. At a certain point, he claimed that the prices that Gilad sent him were estimates in relation to cost prices, i.e., the prices at which Wii and Triple C would be able to purchase the contents of the equipment from IBM, and not estimates in relation to the price they could offer for a civil appeal (p. 6086, paras. 20-27). This is in contradiction to his claim, as stated above, that Wii and Triple C will not be able to receive an offer from IBM and purchase the equipment from it; They are in contradiction to his basic argument that this is an estimate of the price that V and Triple C can offer for a civil appeal (as he testified many times in his main interrogation as stated above, and also shortly before that, at p. 6085, paras. 20-26, and see also P/220, paras. 204-200, paras. 218-220). But here, too, Zeiger encountered difficulty. For now, according to him, even the price stated for Harel in Gilad's email message (P/116) reflects the cost of purchasing the equipment from IBM (p. 6088, paras. 1-6) in a way that, according to his version, would not have left it any profit (the alleged cost was $332,578 (P/116) and the offer submitted by Harel the next day was $333,509 (P/117); in addition to the fact that Harel's price quote that was attached to the email is directed to a civil appeal and the price thereof is a price for a civil appeal and not Harel's cost). Here, too, Zeiger had no real answers (p. 6088, s. 14 - p. 6090, s. 17, where he suddenly referred to the fact that the deal also included Unix computers in an attempt to explain what he said, even though this matter was already off the table). Thus, the explanation given by Zeiger is very difficult. His testimony raised questions and questions. It is not acceptable.
To this, it should be added that the version according to which Zeiger thought that the emails sent by Gilad with prices and quotes of Wii and Triple C revolved around Gilad's estimates of the prices that competitors could offer, even from the real-time documents themselves.