The FBI is yet to find proof to substantiate claims that Saudi Arabia hacked Jeff Bezos phone, and is considering an investigation into those allegations a low priority, The Wall Street Journal reported. Bezos, the founder of Amazon, accused the National Enquirer of trying to extort him in February 2019 after the outlet published intimate texts that exposed his extramarital affair with Lauren Sanchez.
Main Idea: The FBI has not found proof that Saudi Arabia hacked Jeff Bezos’ phone and is treating the claim as a low-priority lead.
Key Points:
The FBI’s low priority on the Bezos phone hack claim may weaken public trust in fair enforcement and leave major privacy questions unresolved.
The case shows limits on government reach and may push better phone security and tighter reporting standards for wealthy and powerful figures.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Central ব্যক্তি whose phone-hacking allegation and related dispute drive the article.
Identified as the company Bezos accused of extortion and blackmail.
The article’s main report is about the FBI’s investigation, priorities, and lack of proof.
Bezos’s company is mentioned in connection with his identity and a request for comment.
Named in the report as the source of leaked personal information.
Described as opening and later closing an investigation tied to the leak allegations.
Mentioned as Bezos’s partner and part of the underlying affair story.
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Sign in to commentMentioned as Bezos’s owned newspaper and part of the background context.
Mentioned as a contacted Saudi diplomatic entity that did not comment.