Business Standard

Ex-twitter employee, accused of spying for Saudi Arabia, granted bond

Would be released unless federal prosecutor­s appeal

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A US judge on Friday said a former Twitter employee could be released on bond, with travel restrictio­ns, while he awaits trial on charges of spying for Saudi Arabia.

Magistrate Judge Paula Mccandlis, of the US District Court in Seattle, said her decision to grant Ahmad Abouammo, 41, bond would go into effect at 4:30 pm(7:30 pm ET), unless federal prosecutor­s made an appeal.

In the case of an appeal, Abouammo would stay in detention until a District Court judge made a ruling on Mccandlis’ decision, defense lawyer Chris Black said.

Abouammo was arrested on Tuesday and indicted on spying charges the next day, along with Ali Alzabarah, 35, another former Twitter employer, and Ahmed Almutairi, 30, who worked for the Saudi royal family.

The indictment points a public finger at Saudi Arabia, a US ally with warm ties to President Donald Trump despite what Amnesty Internatio­nal calls its restrictio­ns on human rights and the “extrajudic­ial killing” of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

The charges put Silicon Valley companies in the spotlight over how they protect user informatio­n, including from employees with no reason for accessing the data.

According to the complaint, Abouammo repeatedly accessed the Twitter account of a prominent critic of the Saudi royal family in early 2015. At one instance, he was able to view the email address and telephone number associated with the account. Abouammo also accessed the account of a second Saudi critic to get informatio­n.

Twitter uncovered Alzabarah’s unauthoriz­ed access of private data and placed him on administra­tive leave in late 2015, but not before he had tapped data from over 6,000 accounts, 33 of which Saudi authoritie­s submitted law enforcemen­t requests on, the complaint said. Almutairi is accused of acting as a go-between for the Saudi government and the Twitter employees.

Assistant US Attorney Todd Greenberg told the court that Abouammo, a dual citizen of the United States and Lebanon, presented a flight risk due to large sums of money he had access to from the alleged co-conspirato­rs.

Black, the defense lawyer, said Abouammo, a Seattle resident, no longer had ties to the other two men and he should be allowed to live at home for the wellbeing of his family.

In a letter presented to the court, Abouammo’s wife, Zeina, said he homeschool­ed their children, who suffered from depression and anxiety after being bullied at school.

Arrest warrants have been issued for Alzabarah and Almutairi, who are believed to be in Saudia Arabia.

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