Former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert was sentenced Monday to eight months in prison in a case involving allegations he accepted cash-stuffed envelopes from an American supporter.
Here's a look at Olmert's four-decade political career:
1973 — Olmert follows in his father's footsteps and is elected to parliament as member of the nationalist Likud party.
1988 — Olmert joins the Cabinet of hawkish Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir.
1993 — Olmert is elected mayor of Jerusalem, beating legendary longtime mayor Teddy Kollek.
1996 — Olmert supervises completion of an archaeological tunnel near a sensitive Jerusalem holy site, triggering deadly Palestinian riots.
2003 — Olmert serves as vice premier in Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's Cabinet.
December 2003 — Olmert gives interview that runs counter to Likud ideology saying he believes Israel must pull out of much of the land it captured from Jordan and Egypt in the 1967 Mideast War, which Palestinians want for a state. It set the stage for Israel's withdrawal from Gaza and parts of the West Bank in 2005.
November 2005 — Olmert breaks away from Likud to form centrist Kadima Party along with Sharon.
January 2006 — Olmert becomes acting prime minister after Sharon suffers stroke.
March 2006 — Olmert leads Kadima to victory in parliamentary elections on a platform of pushing further peace moves with the Palestinians.
2007 — Olmert relaunches U.S.-backed peace talks with the Palestinians in Annapolis, Maryland. Olmert claims to make great progress, though more than a year of talks end without a deal.
September 2007 — A nuclear facility in Syria is destroyed in an airstrike that Israel is widely suspected of carrying out.
September 2008 — Olmert announces resignation to face corruption allegations.
December 2008 — Olmert leads three-week military offensive against Gaza militants in response to rocket attacks on Israel. The campaign draws international criticism because of its heavy civilian death toll.
March 2009 — Olmert leaves office after Benjamin Netanyahu becomes prime minister.
2012 — Olmert is acquitted of most serious allegations in corruption trial, raising hopes for a political comeback.
March 2014 — Court convicts Olmert in a separate bribery trial.
May 2014 — Olmert sentenced to six years in jail in bribery case. Olmert vows appeal but is ordered to report to prison on Sept. 1.
September 2014 — Israeli Supreme Court rules Olmert can stay out of prison until verdict in the bribery case appeal.
March 2015 — Israeli court finds Olmert guilty on charges of fraud, breach of trust and unlawfully accepting money in a case involving allegations he accepted cash-stuffed envelopes from an American supporter.
May 2015 — Israeli court sentences Olmert to eight months in prison. His lawyers say they will appeal.