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Twitter Employee Found Guilty Of Spying On Saudi Rebels, Providing Their Personal Information To Aide To Kingdom’s Crown Prince

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A jury in a federal court in California found Abouammo, a dual US-Lebanese national, who at Twitter helped oversee relationships with journalists and celebrities in the Middle East and North Africa was found guilty after 2-1/2 weeks of trial.

A former Twitter employee, Ahmed Abouammo, has been convicted of spying on Saudi Rebels using the social media platform and passing their personal information to Bader al-Asaker a close aide to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

 

A jury in a federal court in California found Abouammo, a dual US-Lebanese national, who at Twitter helped oversee relationships with journalists and celebrities in the Middle East and North Africa was found guilty after 2-1/2 weeks of trial.

 

He was also accused of being an unregistered agent of the Saudi government.

 

According to The Guardian UK, Abouammo was found to have used his position at Twitter to find personal details identifying critics of the Saudi monarchy who had been posting under anonymous Twitter handles and then supplying the information to Prince Mohammed’s aide.

 

Federal public defenders representing Abouammo did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Twitter also declined to comment, CNN reports.

 

 

 

Prosecutors said Bader Al-Asaker, a close adviser to Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, recruited Abouammo to use his insider knowledge to access Twitter accounts and dig up personal information about Saudi dissidents.

 

Those accounts allegedly included @mujtahidd, a pseudonym for a political agitator who gained millions of Twitter followers in the Arab Spring uprisings by accusing the Saudi royal family of corruption and other misdeeds.

 

In return, Asaker is said to have given him a $20,000 watch and paid a total of more than $300,000 to an account in Lebanon set up in Abouammo’s father’s name.

 

According to the indictment, the Saudi government first made contact with Abouammo in May 2014, asking him to arrange a tour of Twitter’s San Francisco office for a group of Saudi “entrepreneurs”.

 

The group, which included Asaker and other employees of the crown prince, visited San Francisco the following month.

 

 

 

Asaker then asked Abouammo for help in having Prince Mohammed’s Twitter account get “blue tick” verification and asked for his contact details.

 

In November 2014, the indictment says, Abouammo was contacted by another of the defendants in the case, Ahmed Almutairi, a Saudi social media marketing consultant working for the royal family, including Prince Mohammed.

 

Almutairi, who is accused of acting as a middle man for Asaker, requested an “urgent meeting” near Twitter headquarters in San Francisco to discuss their “mutual interest”, according to the indictment.

 

In December, Abouammo flew to London to meet Asaker, who is alleged to have given him the luxury watch and at least $20,000 in cash. Within days, Abouammo started illegally accessing the personal data of a Twitter user who was a critic of the Saudi regime, the indictment said, and then accessed the details of another critic in February 2015.

 

The same month the first payment of $100,000 was paid to the account set up in Abouammo’s father’s name in Lebanon, to which Abouammo had access.

 

Another $200,000 was paid into the account after Abouammo resigned from Twitter in May 2015, the indictment says.

 

Before leaving Twitter, Abouammo introduced the third accused in the case, Ali Alzabarah, to Almutairi.

 

Alzabarah is also accused of spying on Saudi dissidents for Asaker, but the Californian jury did not find Abouammo criminally responsible for Alzabarah’s activities.

 

Alzabarah is said to have met Almutairi at the residence of a Saudi diplomat in Fairfax, Virginia, in May 2015, during a visit to the US by Prince Mohammed. He fled the US with his family to Saudi Arabia in 2015 after being confronted over his actions by Twitter management.

 

Once in Saudi Arabia, he was given a job at the Misk Foundation, a charity established by Prince Mohammed and run by Asaker.

 

Almutairi is also believed to be in Saudi Arabia. Warrants have been issued for the arrests of both men.

 

Abouammo was found guilty of lying to the FBI when he was first confronted by agents in October 2018.

 

He claimed the watch Asaker had given him was only worth $5,000 and produced a falsified, backdated invoice purporting to show that one of the $100,000 payments was for legitimate consultancy work for Asaker.

 

Abouammo was also convicted of wire fraud and honest services fraud, money laundering and a conspiracy charge.

 

"The government demonstrated and the jury found that Abouammo violated a sacred trust to keep private personal information from Twitter's customers and sold private customer information to a foreign government," US Attorney Stephanie Hinds in San Francisco said in a statement.