The couple first met when working at the the investment management firm D.E. Shaw & Co., before Jeff Bezos even founded Amazon. They were married for 25 years, and have four kids together.
News of the divorce raised questions about its impact on the net worth of Jeff Bezos, the richest person in the world. In the end, after the divorce was settled, Jeff Bezos kept his spot as world’s richest and MacKenzie Bezos was awarded a 4% stake in Amazon valued at $35 billion. MacKenzie gave her ex-husband voting control over her stake, and as well as her interests in the Washington Post and Blue Origin.
In response to a question about the Bezos divorce, Donald Trump told reporters he wished the Amazon CEO good luck, and said the divorce was “going to be a beauty.” He later took to Twitter to gift Jeff Bezos with a new nickname: “Jeff Bozo.”
Trump has historically been highly critical of Bezos, Amazon, and the Washington Post. On Twitter, Trump also took aim at the Bezos-owned “lobbyist newspaper.”
Source: Business Insider
Hours after news of the Bezos divorce broke, the National Enquirer reported that Jeff Bezos has been dating a former TV host named Lauren Sanchez — and said that it had conducted a 4-month-long investigation into the affair.
The National Enquirer also said it had obtained “raunchy messages and erotic selfies” exchanged between Bezos and Sanchez, including “one steamy picture too explicit to print here.” One of the texts Bezos sent to Sanchez reportedly read: “I love you, alive girl.”
A Washington Post story later reported that Bezos purposely announced his divorce on Twitter as a way to preempt the National Enquirer report.
On January 30, the Daily Beast reported Jeff Bezos was personally funding an investigation into who leaked his private photos and texts to the National Enquirer. The report said initial findings didn’t indicate that either Bezos’ or Sanchez’ phones were hacked.
The investigation into the leaked text messages is headed up by Gavin de Becker, who serves as Bezos’ personal chief of security. De Becker is an expert known as the “security guru to the stars,” with previous clients including Madonna, Cher, and John Travolta.
De Becker told the Daily Beast he was considering the theory that the leak to the National Enquirer was “politically motivated.” AMI, the parent company of the National Enquirer, has repeatedly denied this.
De Becker and investigators set their sights on Lauren Sanchez’s brother, Michael Sanchez, who has stayed the prime suspect behind the leak. Michael Sanchez is an outspoken Trump supporter who reportedly has ties to prominent allies of the president, including Roger Stone.
The Daily Beast reported on February 10 that “multiple sources” identified Michael Sanchez as the person responsible for leaking the texts. Sanchez has repeatedly denied sharing Bezos’ “penis photos” with AMI, but dodged questions about whether he was responsible to sharing leaked screenshots of texts between the Amazon CEO and his sister.
As for the notion that there are political motives at play: Jeff Bezos and President Trump have a frosty relationship — Bezos criticized Trump during the 2016 election cycle, and the Bezos-owned Washington Post has published coverage critical of Trump and his administration.
The National Enquirer’s publisher, AMI, is headed up by David Pecker, who has a friendship with President Trump that dates back to the 1990s. Pecker is said to have engaged in a practice called “catch and kill” — where Pecker would help cover up any news stories that might cast Trump in an unflattering light.
Besides Pecker, another AMI executive also has links to Trump. David Hughes, one of the four men who serve on AMI’s board of directors, once served as the chief financial officer of Trump Entertainment Resorts up until it filed for bankruptcy in September 2014.
It’s still not clear how, exactly, the National Enquirer got ahold of Bezos’ private texts and photos. Some have speculated that foreign governments were involved, or that it was even hostile action from one of Amazon’s competitors in the tech sector.
Then in February, Bezos then took everyone by surprise by publishing a blog post that accused Pecker and AMI of “extortion and blackmail.” Bezos claimed AMI threatened to release the intimate photos it had acquired unless he agreed to stop investigating the leaks and made a public statement denying the leaks were politically motivated — two things he says he refused to do.
“Of course I don’t want personal photos published, but I also won’t participate in their well-known practice of blackmail, political favors, political attacks, and corruption,” Bezos wrote in his defiant blog post.
Bezos also appeared to include copies of the emails that had been sent to him by lawyers representing AMI. One of those lawyers, deputy general counsel Jon Fine, previously worked at Amazon. Fine’s LinkedIn profile says he worked there from 2006 until 2015, primarily in publishing and marketing the Kindle reader.
In the wake of the blog post, Bezos’ claims of extortion are reportedly under review by federal prosecutors. If AMI is found to have broken any sort of law in the actions it took against Bezos, the company would be in violation of an agreement it made with prosecutors in a separate matter during the 2016 presidential campaign. AMI had admitted to paying off a woman ahead of the election who alleged she had an affair with Donald Trump.
Bezos also hinted in his blog post that there may be ties between the National Enquirer’s investigation into his personal life and the Saudi government. Bezos highlighted Pecker’s reported personal ties to the Saudis, and wrote that “the Saudi angle seems to hit a particularly sensitive nerve” with Pecker.
Journalist Jamal Khashoggi, who was killed at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul last October, worked for the Bezos-owned Washington Post — leading some to speculate that the Saudis were somehow involved with the National Enquirer investigation, especially given Bezos’ blog post.
The Saudi minister of foreign affairs, Adel al-Jubeir, has denied that the country had any role in the feud between Bezos and AMI. He told CBS the whole situation sounded like “a soap opera.”
In the wake of Bezos’ blog post, several journalists — including New Yorker contributor Ronan Farrow — have come forward with their own claims that AMI tried to threaten them into stopping their reporting. Actor Terry Crews also later came forward to say AMI had tried to “silent” him in 2017 with fake stories.
AMI said in a statement that it believes it “acted lawfully” and “in good faith” in its reporting on Bezos and Sanchez. However, AMI also said its board of directors would thoroughly investigate Bezos’ claims and would take “whatever appropriate action is necessary” upon its findings. Pecker serves as chairman of the board.
In an appearance on ABC, Pecker’s lawyer Elkan Abramowitz defended the company’s actions. He said that “politics have nothing to do” with AMI’s threats against Bezos to release his nude photos. He also denied that either Saudi Arabia or the White House were involved in AMI’s stories on Bezos, calling the claim “libel.”
On March 30, Bezos’ chief security consultant Gavin de Becker wrote in The Daily Beast that after his investigation he could conclude that the Saudi government had hacked Bezos’ phone and gained access to his private information.
De Becker wrote that Bezos had been subject to numerous threats by the Saudis since October, when the Washington Post reported its columnist Jamal Khashoggi was killed by Saudi agents.
AMI and Saudi Arabia have reportedly denied any connections, but relationships within the White House, Saudi Arabia, and the tabloid involving figures like Pecker suggest there could be more revelations to come.
In the meantime, the relationship between Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez appears to be flourishing. In his first public appearance since his divorce was finalized in July, Bezos was photographed with Sanchez at the men’s Wimbledon final.
In August, Sanchez — Lauren Sanchez’s brother — appeared on Fox News to talk about the affair between his sister and Bezos. In his first TV interview about his involvement, Sanchez said that Bezos came to him for help managing the press because he didn’t think Amazon’s PR team was “equipped” to deal. He also again denied any involvement in leaking Bezos’ photos.
Federal prosecutors have opened an investigation into Bezos’ claims of blackmail against AMI, Fox News reported. The US Attorney for the Southern District of New York has reportedly convened a grand jury that is taking testimony on the incident, and Sanchez said in his TV appearance he plans to cooperate with investigators.
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Jeff Bezos
MacKenzie Bezos
Lauren Sanchez