Here are Thursday’s latest updates from Israel, Gaza, the West Bank and the Middle East:

■ Israel Police said that they attribute the offense of murder to a Palestinian bus driver who ran over an ultra-Orthodox protester in Jerusalem the day prior, after retracting their previous intention to attribute aggravated murder to him.

■ Searches for the deceased hostage Ran Gvili resumed in the Zeitoun neighborhood, after being halted due to weather conditions, according to reports from Gaza.

■ The commissioner of the Israel Police is delaying the publication of the investigation results into the leak of a video showing Israeli soldiers abusing a Palestinian detainee at an Israeli facility, in which the IDF’s former top legal adviser, Military Advocate General Yifat Tomer-Yerushalmi, is a suspect.

■ Hundreds of demonstrators blocked a major junction in Jerusalem in protest of the government’s actions against the Supreme Court, following the arrest of four anti-government protesters and the strip-search of one of them earlier on Wednesday.

■ The IDF said it targeted a “key Hamas terrorist who advanced terror attacks against IDF troops” after Hamas militants fired at “an area where IDF troops are operating” in northern Gaza.

■ Iran’s top judge warned protesters there would be “no leniency for those who help the enemy against the Islamic Republic,” while accusing Israel and the ⁠U.S. of pursuing hybrid methods to disrupt the country.

■ The Israeli military said it struck and killed a Hezbollah militant in one of the group’s aerial units in Jouaiyya, southern Lebanon.

■ The police officer who fatally shot a Bedouin citizen of Israel in the country’s south was questioned again and shown body-camera footage of the shooting, recorded by another officer at the scene, saying it supports his account.

■ Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara is expected to announce that, in her view, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s request for a pardon in his criminal trial does not meet the legal requirements.