Former Twitter Employee Found Guilty of Spying for Saudi Arabia

Twitter Spying for Saudi Arabia

A former Twitter employee has been pronounced guilty for his
role in digging up private information pertaining to certain
Twitter users and turning over that data to Saudi Arabia.

Ahmad Abouammo, 44, was convicted by a jury after a two-week
trial in San Francisco federal court, Bloomberg reported[1]
Tuesday. He faces up to 20 years in prison when sentenced.

The verdict[2]
comes nearly three years after Abouammo, along with Ali Alzabarah
and Ahmed Almutairi (Ahmed Aljbreen) were indicted in 2019[3]
for acting as “illegal agents” of Saudi Arabia, with the former
also charged with destroying, altering, and falsifying records in a
federal investigation.

CyberSecurity

Prosecutors accused Abouammo and Alzabarah, both of whom joined
Twitter in 2013, of being enlisted by officials of the Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia for unmasking its critics[4]
on the social media platform.

According to court documents, both individuals leveraged their
access to internal systems to unauthorizedly get hold of nonpublic
information about users of specific accounts that were critical of
the regime.

This information encompassing email addresses, phone numbers, IP
addresses, and dates of birth, were then handed over to the
officials in return for which Abouammo received $300,000 in cash
and a Hublot Unico Big Bang King Gold Ceramic watch valued at
$40,000.

CyberSecurity

Furthermore, in an attempt to impede the probe, Abouammo is
said[5]
to have lied to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) agents
when confronted at his Seattle home in October 2018, saying the
watch was “junky” and just worth $500, in addition to providing a
falsified invoice about only receiving a $100,000 wire for
consulting and media strategy work.

While Alzabarah sought assistance from Almutairi to flee the
U.S. in December 2015 and escape the trial, Abouammo was arrested
on November 5, 2019.

“These individuals are charged with targeting and obtaining
private data from dissidents and known critics, under the direction
and control of the government of Saudi Arabia,” FBI Special Agent
in Charge, John F. Bennett, said at the time. “Insider threats pose
a critical threat to American businesses and our national
security.”

References

  1. ^
    reported
    (www.bloomberg.com)
  2. ^
    verdict
    (www.courthousenews.com)
  3. ^
    indicted
    in 2019
    (thehackernews.com)
  4. ^
    unmasking its critics
    (www.buzzfeednews.com)
  5. ^
    said
    (www.justice.gov)

Read more

Leave a Reply