Lodi News-Sentinel

Is Saudi prince linked to Bezos hack?

- By Molly Schuetz and Giles Turner

NEW YORK — United Nations experts said the Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman was possibly involved in hacking the cellphone of Amazon.com Inc. Chief Executive Officer Jeff Bezos and have called for an investigat­ion.

Bezos’ phone was hacked following an exchange he had with the Saudi Prince on WhatsApp in 2018 that was infiltrate­d via an MP4 video file sent from the WhatsApp account used by the Prince, according to a statement by UN independen­t experts Wednesday.

A forensic analysis found that “massive and (for Bezos’ phone) unpreceden­ted exfiltrati­on of data from the phone began.”

The statement said the intrusion “likely was undertaken through the use of a prominent spyware product identified in other Saudi surveillan­ce cases, such as the NSO Group’s Pegasus-3 malware, through the use of Israeli spyware.” The report notes that the product is widely reported to have been purchased and deployed by Saudi officials.

A representa­tive for the NSO

Group denied any connection to the Bezos hack, describing such a suggestion as “defamatory. Our technology was not used in this instance.” The representa­tive said “our technology cannot be used on U.S. phone numbers, our products are only used to investigat­e terror and serious crime.”

The report from UN independen­t experts Agnes Callamard, UN Special Rapporteur on summary executions and extrajudic­ial killings, and David Kaye, UN Special Rapporteur on freedom of expression, follows an investigat­ion into the killing of Saudi and Washington Post journalist, Jamal Khashoggi.

“The informatio­n we have received suggests the possible involvemen­t of the Crown Prince in surveillan­ce of Mr. Bezos, in an effort to influence, if not silence, The Washington Post’s reporting on Saudi Arabia,” Callamard and Kaye wrote.

The allegation­s also point to a pattern of targeted surveillan­ce of perceived opponents and those of broader strategic importance to the Saudi authoritie­s, the report said, which are relevant “to ongoing evaluation of claims about the Crown Prince’s involvemen­t in the 2018 murder” of Khashoggi.

The report said the circumstan­ces and timing of the Bezos hack “strengthen support for further investigat­ion by U.S. and other relevant authoritie­s of the allegation­s that the Crown Prince ordered, incited, or, at a minimum, was aware of planning for but failed to stop the mission that fatally targeted Mr. Khashoggi in Istanbul.”

The revelation of new details about a security breach that affected the world’s richest man comes about a year after the surprise announceme­nt that Bezos and his wife, MacKenzie, would divorce after 25 years of marriage. The National Enquirer subsequent­ly disclosed an extramarit­al affair between Bezos and Lauren Sanchez, a former television anchor, in a series of reports that relied, in part, on intimate text messages sent by Bezos.

Bezos later wrote an extraordin­ary blog post accusing the tabloid of threatenin­g to publish more embarrassi­ng text messages and photos unless he publicly affirmed that there was no political motivation or outside force behind the tabloid’s coverage.

Gavin de Becker, a security consultant for Bezos, said at the time that he believed the Saudi Arabian government had accessed Bezos’ phone before the Enquirer exposed the affair.

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