Shanghai Daily

US tabloid denies Bezos accusation­s of blackmail

- TECHNOLOGY

A LAWYER for the National Enquirer has denied allegation­s by Jeff Bezos that the US tabloid had tried to extort and blackmail him, insisting that embarrassi­ng photograph­s were obtained from a “reliable” source.

“It absolutely is not extortion and not blackmail,” Elkan Abramowitz, who represents National Enquirer parent company American Media Inc’S chief executive David Pecker, told ABC television’s “This Week.”

“What happened was the story was given to the National Enquirer by a reliable source that had been given informatio­n to the National Enquirer for seven years prior to the story. It was a source that was well known to both Mr Bezos and Miss (Lauren) Sanchez.”

Last month, the supermarke­t tabloid reported that Bezos, 55, had an extramarit­al affair with a former news anchor, publishing a trove of private text messages. The report appeared days after Bezos and his wife MacKenzie announced their divorce.

When asked if the Enquirer’s source was Sanchez’s brother Michael, as reported by some media outlets, Abramowitz declined to confirm.

“It was a person that was known to both Bezos and Ms Sanchez,” he said. “I can tell you it’s not Saudi Arabia, it’s not President Trump, it’s not Roger Stone. But I cannot tell you who the source is.”

The attorney was responding to Bezos’s stunning claims published on online platform Medium on Thursday.

Bezos hinted he may have been targeted by pro-Trump forces in part because of coverage by The Washington Post, which he owns, of the murder of its contributo­r Jamal Khashoggi, strangled and dismembere­d by Saudi agents in the kingdom’s Istanbul consulate in October.

Abramowitz insisted the Enquirer’s exchanges with Bezos were journalist­ic negotiatin­g practices, not extortion.

“I think both Bezos and AMI had interests in resolving their difference­s. Bezos didn’t want another story written about him or those pictures published, AMI did not want to have the libel against them that this was inspired by the White House, inspired by Saudi Arabia or inspired by The Washington Post.”

(AFP)

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