Amazon Boss Accuses National Enquirer of Blackmail
The world's
richest man, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, has accused the owner of a US gossip
magazine of trying to blackmail him over private pictures.
He said the
National Enquirer's parent company, American Media Inc (AMI), wanted him to
stop investigating how they had obtained his private messages.
Hours after
Mr Bezos announced his divorce last month, the magazine published details,
including private messages, of an extramarital affair.
AMI says the
company "acted lawfully".
"American
Media believes fervently that it acted lawfully in the reporting of the story
of Mr Bezos. Further, at the time of the recent allegations made by Mr Bezos,
it was in good faith negotiations to resolve all matters with him," the
company said in a statement.
"Nonetheless,
in light of the nature of the allegations published by Mr Bezos, the Board has
convened and determined that it should promptly and thoroughly investigate the
claims. Upon completion of that investigation, the Board will take whatever appropriate
action is necessary."
In a
stunning blog post on Thursday, Mr Bezos posted an email he said had been
sent to his intermediaries by AMI's representatives threatening to publish
"intimate photos" of him and his lover, former TV host Lauren
Sanchez.
The
billionaire, who also owns the Washington Post newspaper, said AMI had wanted
him to make a "false public statement" that the National Enquirer's
coverage of him and his mistress was not politically motivated.
According to
emails included by Mr Bezos in his blog, an AMI lawyer proposed on Wednesday
that the photos would not be published in return for a public statement
"affirming that [Bezos and his team] have no knowledge or basis" to
suspect such a motive.
It comes
after Mr Bezos' investigator suggested they had "strong leads" to
suspect political reasons.
"Rather
than capitulate to extortion and blackmail," wrote Mr Bezos, "I've
decided to publish exactly what they sent me, despite the personal cost and
embarrassment they threaten."
Early in the
blog post, Mr Bezos mentions AMI's links to President Donald Trump
Reacting to
the allegations on Friday, AMI said the company "believes fervently that
it acted lawfully in the reporting of the story of Mr Bezos".
AMI said
that they had been "in good faith negotiations to resolve all matters with
him" when the allegations were made, and that the board "has convened
and determined that it should promptly and thoroughly investigate the claims".
Mr Bezos
said his ownership of the Washington Post was a "complexifier" for
him because he had made enemies of "certain powerful people",
including President Trump, who is a friend of AMI's boss, David Pecker.
AMI recently
admitted in court that it had co-ordinated with the Trump presidential campaign
to pay a Playboy model $150,000 (£115,000) in hush money to keep quiet about
her alleged affair with Mr Trump.
Mr Bezos
notes in his blog post how the publisher had confessed to the so-called
"catch and kill" deal to bury Karen McDougal's politically
embarrassing story.
AMI's
agreement to co-operate with federal authorities means it will not face
criminal charges over the payments, Manhattan prosecutors announced in
December.
Mr Trump's
former lawyer Michael Cohen - who facilitated the hush money at the direction,
he says, of Mr Trump - has already admitted violating campaign finance laws.
The Amazon
boss did not try to hide the potential for embarrassment, writing "of
course I don't want personal photos published" and noting what he called
"AMI's long-earned reputation for weaponising journalistic
privileges".
"But,"
he continued, "I also won't participate in their well-known practice of
blackmail, political favours, political attacks, and corruption.
"I
prefer to stand up, roll this log over, and see what crawls out."
His blog
contained itemised details of 10 pictures in an email from the magazine's
editor, Dylan Howard, who said they had been "obtained during our
newsgathering".
New Yorker
writer Ronan Farrow tweeted that he "and at least one other prominent
journalist" had been subject to similar "stop digging or we'll ruin
you" threats from AMI.
Mr Bezos
said "AMI's claim of newsworthiness is that the photos are necessary to show
Amazon shareholders that my business judgment is terrible".
But the
Amazon boss countered that the firm's results "speak for themselves".
Dylan
Howard's name, along with those of two National Enquirer reporters, appeared on
an 11-page story the magazine published on 9 January containing alleged details
of Mr Bezos' affair with Ms Sanchez.
The tabloid
labelled it "the biggest investigation in Enquirer history!".
This has
been the focus of Mr Bezos's private investigators.
The probe
has been led by security Gavin de Becker - who is the billionaire's long-term
head of security.
He has said
that "strong leads point to political motives" over the leak, but has
not divulged much further information.
Last
week he said Lauren Sanchez's brother, Michael, had become one of the
focuses of their investigation.
Mr Sanchez,
a publicist who lives in West Hollywood, has strongly rejected involvement.
"I am
not dignifying de Becker's passive aggressive allegations or his crazy
conspiracy theories," he said in a statement to Page Six. He also said he
had recommended his sister fire Mr de Becker.
US media
report that Mr Sanchez knows AMI's David Pecker - as well as other people with
links to Mr Trump including his former campaign aides Carter Page and Roger
Stone.
Mr Stone was
indicted by the special counsel's Russia investigation last month.
He has
confirmed to the Daily Beast that he knows Mr Sanchez - describing him as a
"very good guy".
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