CNN anchor Jake Tapper trolled the Saudi government, saying Jamal Khashoggi could have investigated the reported Jeff Bezos phone hack 'but you killed him'

MBS Khashoggi and Jake Tapper
MBS Khashoggi and Jake Tapper

Saudi Royal Court/Handout via REUTERS; REUTERS/Osman Orsal/File Photo; YouTube/CNN

CNN anchor Jake Tapper trolled the Saudi government, saying that Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi could have investigated the Jeff Bezos phone hack "but you killed him."

Tapper's tweet came after The Guardian reported on Tuesday that Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman had hacked Jeff Bezos' personal phone in May 2018 via a video file sent on WhatsApp. The UN backed the claims in a. Wednesday statement.

The alleged hack would have happened just five months before the October 2018 murder of Khashoggi, who wrote for the Bezos-owned Washington Post, at the hands of Saudi agents in Istanbul.

Tapper's tweet was a response to a tweet from the Saudi embassy in Washington, DC, that denied the hacking reports and called for an investigation into the matter.

"Great idea. There was a respected Washington Post columnist who i would love to have investigate the matter but you killed him," Tapper wrote, alluding to Khashoggi.

The phone hacking reports has resurfaced a conversation on how the National Enquirer, a US tabloid, gained access to intimate texts and photos between Bezos and his girlfriend Lauren Sanchez, with whom he was having an extramarital affair at the time.

The Enquirer had threatened to publish the intimate photos, and Bezos and his security chief, Gavin De Becker, both alluded at the time that Saudi Arabia was involved. The Enquirer's proprietor, David Pecker, has a longstanding relationship with Crown Prince Mohammed.

khashoggi mbs
khashoggi mbs

Associated Press/Virginia Mayo; Nicolas Asfouri - Pool/Getty

The murder of Khashoggi — who had publicly criticized the Saudi government and Crown Prince Mohammed in his writing — has been widely linked to Crown Prince Mohammed. The CIA and UN both believe he ordered it.

Last December Saudi Arabia sentenced five people to death, and three more to jail, over the killing, but Crown Prince Mohammed maintained he was unaware of the killing in advance or had any direct responsibility.

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