Orlando Sentinel

Feds eye AMI after Bezos blog

- By Michael R. Sisak, Jim Mustian and Michael Balsamo

Federal prosecutor­s are investigat­ing after the Amazon CEO accused the media company of blackmail.

NEW YORK — The National Enquirer’s alleged attempts to blackmail Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos with intimate photos could get the tabloid’s parent company and top editors in deep legal trouble and reopen them to prosecutio­n for paying hush money to a Playboy model who claimed to have had an affair with Donald Trump.

Federal prosecutor­s are looking at whether the Enquirer’s feud with Bezos violated a cooperatio­n and non-prosecutio­n agreement that recently spared the tabloid from charges in the hush-money case, two people familiar with the matter said Friday.

The clash between the world’s richest man and American’s most aggressive supermarke­t tabloid spilled into public view late Thursday when Bezos accused it of threatenin­g to print photos of Bezos and the woman with whom he was having an extramarit­al affair.

Bezos said the Enquirer demanded that he stop investigat­ing how the publicatio­n recently obtained private messages he and girlfriend Lauren Sanchez, a former TV anchor who is also married, had exchanged.

Enquirer owner American Media Inc. said Friday that its board of directors ordered an investigat­ion and will take “whatever appropriat­e action is necessary.” Earlier in the day, the company said it “acted lawfully” while reporting the story and engaged in “good-faith negotiatio­ns” with Bezos.

In recent months, the tabloid acknowledg­ed secretly assisting Trump’s White House campaign by paying $150,000 to Playboy model Karen McDougal for the rights to her story about an alleged affair with Trump. The company then suppressed the story until after the 2016 election.

Trump’s longtime personal attorney and fixer Michael Cohen pleaded guilty last year to charges that included helping to broker that transactio­n.

Federal prosecutor­s considered the payment an illegal corporate contributi­on. In September, AMI reached an agreement with federal authoritie­s that spared it from prosecutio­n for campaign finance violations. It promised in the agreement not to break any laws. The deal also required the continuing cooperatio­n of top AMI executives, including CEO David Pecker and Enquirer editor Dylan Howard.

Now, federal prosecutor­s in New York are looking at whether AMI violated those terms, the people familiar with the matter said. A violation of the agreement could lead to criminal charges over the McDougal payments. And the resulting court proceeding­s could lay bare details of the gossip sheet’s cozy relationsh­ip with the president.

The Enquirer and top executives could also be subject to state and federal extortion and coercion charges and prosecutio­n under New York City’s revenge porn law, passed last year, which bans even the threat of sharing intimate photograph­s, legal experts said.

Bezos’ allegation­s, detailed in a blog post, also highlight a tabloid practice known as “catch-and-kill,” in which the gossip sheets use the threat of damaging stories as leverage or to curry favor with a celebrity.

The blog post included emails from an AMI attorney saying the tabloid wouldn’t post the intimate photos if the Bezos camp publicly stated that it has no evidence to suggest the Enquirer’s coverage of Bezos was politicall­y motivated.

The Enquirer has “weaponized journalism and made it into this bartering, brokering thing where it’s like, ‘If I can blackmail you with the threat — I’ll expose this unless you’ve got something better,’ ” Goldberg said.

It is a federal crime to threaten to injure someone’s reputation in exchange for money or a “thing of value,” though federal courts haven’t made it clear whether a public statement, like the one demanded by AMI, could be considered something of value.

Former New York federal prosecutor Jennifer Rodgers said prosecutor­s are probably weighing the pros and cons of keeping the cooperatio­n agreement in place.

The agreement secures Pecker’s testimony in any future cases stemming from the hush-money payments, and winning a criminal case over the Bezos matter would be far from clear-cut, Rodgers said.

The Bezos camp has suggested the Enquirer’s coverage of his affair was driven by dirty politics. Trump has criticized Bezos on Twitter over his ownership of The Washington Post and of Amazon.

Bezos’ extramarit­al affair became public when the Enquirer published a Jan. 9 story about his relationsh­ip with Sanchez. Bezos then hired private investigat­ors to find out how the tabloid got texts and photos the two exchanged.

Bezos’ personal investigat­ors, led by his security consultant Gavin de Becker, have been focusing on Sanchez’s brother, according to a person familiar with the matter.

De Becker and his team suspect Michael Sanchez, a talent manager who touts his support of Trump and is an acquaintan­ce of Trump allies Roger Stone and Carter Page, may have provided the informatio­n to the Enquirer, the person said. The person spoke on condition of anonymity.

Sanchez, who is also his sister’s manager, said in a tweet that de Becker “spreads fake, unhinged conservati­ve conspiracy theories.”

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