Prosecutors probing National Enquirer after Bezos report
NEW YORK — The National Enquirer’s alleged attempt 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 said she 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 gossip sheet from charges in the hush-money case, two people familiar with the matter told The Associated Press on 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.
He said the Enquirer made two demands: Stop investigating how the publication recently obtained private messages that Bezos and his girlfriend had exchanged, and publicly declare that the Enquirer’s coverage of Bezos was not politically motivated.
Enquirer owner American Media Inc. said Friday that its board of directors ordered a prompt and thorough investigation and will take “whatever appropriate action is necessary.” Earlier in the day, the company said it “acted lawfully” while reporting the story Federal prosecutors in New York are now looking at whether AMI violated terms of a cooperation agreement involving the National Enquirer and its hush-money payment to Playboy centerfold Karen Mcdougal.
and engaged in “good-faith negotiations” with Bezos.
Bezos is risking personal embarrassment in taking on the Enquirer, which devoted 11 pages to the tale of his affair with Lauren Sanchez, a former host of the Fox show “So You Think You Can Dance.” But he has the means to torment his tormentors.
In recent months, the Trump-friendly tabloid acknowledged secretly assisting Trump’s White House campaign by paying $150,000 to Playboy centerfold Karen Mcdougal for the rights to her story about an alleged affair with Trump. The company then buried the story until after the 2016 election.
Trump’s longtime personal attorney Michael Cohen pleaded guilty last year to charges that included helping to broker that transaction.
Federal prosecutors considered the payment an illegal corporate contribution to Trump’s campaign. In September, though, AMI reached an agreement with federal authorities that spared it from prosecution.
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 also could be subject to state and federal extortion and coercion charges and prosecution under New York City’s revenge-porn law, which bans even the threat of sharing intimate photographs, experts said.