Daily Mail

Billionair­es engulfed in cyber hacking sensation

The Amazon boss and Saudi prince swapped numbers at a dinner party. Now they’re mired in a scandal involving murder, an adulterous affair, spying allegation­s – and a global conspiracy

- from Tom Leonard

AS a titan of Silicon Valley, Jeff Bezos should probably have known the first rule of internet security – never click on anything sent to you by someone you don’t know.

And yet the Amazon boss thought he knew Mohammed bin Salman, crown prince of Saudi Arabia.

The two ‘kings’ – one the world’s richest man and creator of the online retail giant, and the other the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia and heir to his family’s $100billion fortune – had been introduced to each other in April 2018 at a glittering Hollywood dinner.

The crown prince was on a charm-offensive tour of America, not only to find possible investors for his desert kingdom but also to clean up his tarnished brand and particular­ly his controvers­ial track record as his family’s merciless ‘enforcer’.

Pressing the flesh of everyone from Oprah Winfrey to film star Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson, ‘ MBS’ had received a warm welcome everywhere he went, even getting an invitation to the White House.

Amazon founder Mr Bezos, today worth $116billion (£87billion) and a man who rarely misses a business opportunit­y, was interested in opening data centres in Saudi Arabia.

The two men swapped phone numbers – naturally – which led to them striking up a chummy relationsh­ip on the online and supposedly encrypted messaging service WhatsApp.

But that apparently innocuous encounter, revealed in a jaw- dropping United Nations report yesterday, would have seismic consequenc­es.

The crown prince wasn’t trying to befriend Mr Bezos, it is alleged. Instead, spyware had apparently been sent from the Saudi heir’s WhatsApp account to Mr Bezos’s phone to steal its secrets. The Saudi government yesterday said it was ‘ absurd’ to suggest it was behind the hacking of Mr Bezos’s phone.

Its embassy in Washington called for an investigat­ion.

The UN, too, has demanded an immediate inquiry into the findings of two independen­t human rights experts who compiled its report, who call the alleged cyberspyin­g an ‘effort to influence, if not silence’ reporting on Saudi Arabia by the Washington Post.

The newspaper, which Mr Bezos owns, has been highly critical of Saudi Arabia, chiefly over its coverage of the horrific murder of the Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi in October 2018 (the crime at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul was reportedly filmed and the victim’s body afterwards cut into pieces).

Mr Khashoggi, whose slaying was allegedly ordered by Mr bin Salman – something he has always denied – was a Washington Post columnist who regularly attacked repression in Saudi Arabia.

According to the UN, a few weeks after Mr Bezos and MBS met in Los Angeles (several months before Mr Khashoggi’s murder), Mr Bezos received and opened an encrypted video file sent from Mr bin Salman’s WhatsApp account during a friendly exchange.

Investigat­ors now believe the video – purportedl­y an Arabiclang­uage promotiona­l film about telecommun­ications – was anything but helpful.

According to the UN report, it was ‘later establishe­d, with reasonable certainty, that the video’s downloader infected Mr Bezos’s phone with malicious code’.

Within hours, this spyware had taken control of Mr Bezos’s phone and reportedly extracted ‘massive’ amounts of data from it. Some of the informatio­n was of a very intimate nature.

EXACTLY how intimate, says the UN report, was revealed in November 2018 when a single photograph was texted to Mr Bezos from the crown prince’s WhatsApp account along with a ‘sardonic caption’.

The image was of a young woman, apparently a model, who strongly resembled Lauren Sanchez, 49, the busty wife of a friend of Mr Bezos.

The sexist photo caption read: ‘Arguing with a woman is like reading the software license agreement. In the end you have to ignore everything and click I agree.’ Mr Bezos and his wife would then have been discussing their divorce – as anyone secretly reading his text messages would have learnt.

The photo may have been a crude attempt at blackmail, for Miss Sanchez’s significan­ce, evidently known to the sender, wouldn’t become general knowledge for two more months.

In January 2019 the sensationa­l news broke that, although married for 25 years to MacKenzie Tuttle and the father of four children with her (three biological sons and one adopted daughter), Mr Bezos had been having a torrid affair with Miss Sanchez, a pneumatic former TV presenter and married mother of two.

America’s gossip tabloid the National Enquirer broke the story, revealing lurid details of how it had reportedly spent four months trailing the couple ‘across five states and 40,000 miles, tailing them in private jets, swanky limos, helicopter rides, romantic hikes, five- star hotel hideaways, intimate dinner dates and “quality time” in hidden love nests’.

The Enquirer piled on the embarrassm­ent, revealing raunchy text messages and ‘erotic’ selfie photos that had been exchanged by

the lovers. It was all not only personally humiliatin­g for Mr Bezos – who almost simultaneo­usly announced he and his wife were getting divorced – but also risked devastatin­g his business affairs.

Why? Because the couple had been married before he started Amazon from the garage of their rented home in 1994. Under the laws of Washington state (where they lived) all assets of a divorcing couple have to be divided equally and fairly. Analysts warned that Mr Bezos, 56, might even lose control of Amazon if he had to pay too much to his wife.

In the event, she took $35billion (£ 26billion) worth of Amazon shares in the divorce settlement, temporaril­y dethroning Mr Bezos as the world’s richest person but not breaking his grip on the retail behemoth.

So, his denials notwithsta­nding, is it possible that Mr bin Salman or his underlings actually put ‘spyware’ on Mr Bezos’s phone, effectivel­y gaining access to all its informatio­n, from his text messages to its location?

It certainly is. The UN report notes meaningful­ly that in November 2017 the elite Saudi Royal Guard, which protects the country’s monarchy, bought from a controvers­ial Israeli technology firm, NSO Group, sophistica­ted secret software designed to enable the remote surveillan­ce of smartphone­s.

Analysts say such a decision must have been approved by the crown prince, who has been leading the campaign against political opponents.

Within the next few months – around the time Mr Bezos’s phone was reportedly hacked – a string of outspoken critics of the Saudi regime had their phones infected by malicious code via a texted link on WhatsApp, says the UN report.

They included human rights activists, Saudi dissidents and even an Amnesty Internatio­nal official. A common link was that they were in contact with the soon-to-be-murdered journalist Mr Khashoggi.

Last year, WhatsApp admitted a major cybersecur­ity breach had allowed spyware allegedly made by NSO Group to be installed on phones. It said the malicious code could be transmitte­d even by a voice call that wasn’t answered.

Facebook, which owns WhatsApp, has since sued NSO Group in America.

Added to which, this week’s UN report also notes that Facebook has confirmed that sending a video file to a WhatsApp user – precisely as the Saudis are accused of having sent to Mr Bezos – was a method for installing malicious spyware.

Appalled that the Enquirer got hold of his text messages and selfie photos, Mr Bezos (who has declined to comment on the UN report) was determined to trace the leak.

He brought in an external team of investigat­ors. Speculatio­n initially focused on Miss Sanchez’s brother, Michael, who denied selling them to the magazine. But it soon emerged that Mr Bezos was

convinced this was about far more than money. In February 2019, he published an article in which he suggested he had been targeted because of the political coverage of the Washington Post, becoming an enemy of Saudi Arabia chiefly over its coverage of the murder of Mr Khashoggi.

Mr Bezos, who attended a memorial service for the journalist outside the consulate in Turkey where he was killed, became a target for endless online criticism from Saudi trolls who also called for a boycott of Amazon.

Mr Bezos’s security chief, Gavin de Becker, later directly accused the government in Riyadh of hacking the Amazon chief’s phone.

‘Our investigat­ors and several experts concluded with high confidence that the Saudis had access to Bezos’ phone and gained private informatio­n,’ wrote Mr de Becker. However, he was vague about details.

Where did this all fit in with the National Enquirer? Mr Bezos has claimed that the Enquirer’s owner, David Pecker, has strong ties to Mr bin Salman, having reportedly met the crown prince in Saudi Arabia in 2017.

When MBS flew to America the following year, Mr Pecker’s company obligingly published a glossy magazine, The New Kingdom, promoting the future Saudi king on the front page as a great leader who would transform the world.

(Pecker is also close to Donald Trump, who loathes Mr Bezos due to the Washington Post’s attacks on his presidency. The US Justice Department has accused Mr Pecker of helping the Trump campaign ‘kill’ damaging stories about the President’s alleged extramarit­al affairs by buying the accusers’ stories but never publishing them.)

In his online article from February 2019, Mr Bezos accused the Enquirer and its owner of ‘extortion and blackmail’, claiming the company had threatened to publish graphic photos of him – including what he memorably called a ‘below-thebelt selfie’ – if he didn’t affirm publicly that political considerat­ions had nothing to do with its reporting of his affair.

For its part, the Enquirer insists that

‘Extortion and blackmail’

Miss Sanchez’s brother Michael had been its source for stories about Mr Bezos’s affair. (Michael Sanchez has admitted he helped the tabloid but also insists that it had seen private text exchanges between Mr Bezos and Miss Sanchez’s sister before he became involved.)

A spokesman for American Media, which owns the Enquirer, said it ‘does not have, nor have we ever had, any editorial or financial ties to Saudi Arabia’.

The company has previously insisted that the source for its expose on Mr Bezos’s affair was ‘not Saudi Arabia’.

The UN report makes clear that Mr Bezos was hardly the only victim of Saudi cyber-hacking, which one US senator has described as a ‘growing trend’.

Jared Kushner, Mr Trump’s son-in-law and a key White House foreign policy aide, reportedly chats regularly with Mr bin Salman on WhatsApp, prompting speculatio­n that his phone might also have been hacked, if these allegation­s are true.

The new bombshell claims present a conundrum for President Trump and Mr Kushner, who both have close ties to the crown prince even though US intelligen­ce says with ‘medium-to-high’ certainty that he ordered Mr Khashoggi’s murder.

It would be astonishin­g if the heir to the ruling dynasty of one of the Middle East’s most powerful countries personally tried to twist the arm of the world’s richest man over unflatteri­ng coverage in his newspaper.

However, Saudi experts alleged yesterday that is precisely how the kingdom’s leaders do things – personally.

Despite Saudi denials, the move has backfired spectacula­rly. MBS already faced intense criticism over his backing for a devastatin­g civil war in Yemen, the alleged torture of rich Saudis in a Riyadh hotel and the supposed kidnapping of the Lebanese prime minister during a visit to Saudi Arabia.

That ugly charge sheet now includes calls for an investigat­ion into his possible involvemen­t in the rather more mundane alleged offence of phone hacking – albeit of the world’s richest man.

 ??  ?? Lovers: Jeff Bezos, top, with former TV presenter Lauren Sanchez and the ‘intimate’ text message sent to Mr Bezos
Lovers: Jeff Bezos, top, with former TV presenter Lauren Sanchez and the ‘intimate’ text message sent to Mr Bezos
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 ??  ?? Saudi visit: Mr Bezos with Mohammed bin Salman
Saudi visit: Mr Bezos with Mohammed bin Salman
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