Las Vegas Review-Journal

Tabloid parent defends actions

Enquirer’s deal in case in jeopardy over Bezos feud

- By Debra J. Saunders Review-journal White House Correspond­ent

WASHINGTON — The National Enquirer’s parent company said Friday that it will investigat­e Jeff Bezos’ claim that the magazine tried to blackmail him.

American Media Inc., the tabloid’s parent company, said in a statement that its attorneys were “acting lawfully” and engaging in “good faith negotiatio­ns” with lawyers associated with Bezos, the richest man in the world, founder of Amazon and owner of The Washington Post.

“Upon completion of that investigat­ion, the board will take whatever appropriat­e action is necessary,” AMI said.

As news organizati­ons report that federal authoritie­s are looking into Bezos’ allegation­s, legal observers are wondering if the imbroglio will kill an agreement with New York federal prosecutor­s not to prosecute the tabloid or editor David Pecker, a longtime friend of President Donald Trump, for tax or campaign finance violations.

On Thursday, Bezos went on the online platform Medium to accuse the Enquirer of dangling compromisi­ng photos in an attempt to blackmail him. Rather than accede, Bezos defiantly posted emails in which the tabloid’s lawyers informed his representa­tives that the scandal rag had obtained incriminat­ing “selfies” of Bezos and his reputed mistress, Lauren Sanchez.

An Enquirer story on the married billionair­e and married

Sanchez already had led to the January announceme­nt that

Bezos and wife Mackenzie Bezos were getting a divorce.

The Enquirer apparently had more dirt on the billionair­e. In one letter, an AMI attorney offered “not to publish, distribute, share, or describe unpublishe­d texts and photos.” In return, Bezos would be expected to end an investigat­ion into AMI’S practices and issue a statement asserting that he had no knowledge that the tabloid’s stories on Bezos were politicall­y motivated.

In September, AMI signed a non-prosecutio­n agreement with the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York after the company stipulated it paid $150,000 to former Playboy playmate Karen Mcdougal to ensure she “did not publicize damaging allegation­s about” a candidate in the 2016 election. The agreement cited Enquirer editor Pecker by name.

With his post Thursday, Bezos became an instant hero on social media. New York Times columnist Paul Krugman called him “a profile in moral courage.”

Former Nevada U.S. Attorney Gregory Brower told the Review-journal that it is a federal crime “to demand something of value from someone with a threat to injure their reputation.”

But federal-prosecutor-turned-defense-attorney Richard Serafini wasn’t sure prosecutor­s would see this as a winnable case, when AMI could argue the emails were part of a negotiatio­n.

“Virtually every lawsuit has a person, the defendant, who stands to be embarrasse­d” and pushes for a nondisclos­ure agreement in exchange for a cash payment, Serafini said.

Contact Debra J. Saunders at dsaunders@reviewjour­nal.com or 202-662-7391. Follow @Debrajsaun­ders on Twitter.

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Jeff Bezos

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