He faces between 10 and 20 years in prison for acting on behalf of a foreign government and for money laundering, fraud and falsification of documents.

Ahmad Abouammo, a former employee of Twitter in the United States, was found guilty of having spied on users of the social network on behalf of Saudi Arabia, which sought to know the identity of people critical of the regime and the Royal family.

A jury in a San Francisco court convicted the man, who sold personal information about anonymous users to Riad, in exchange for tens of thousands of dollars.

His sentence will be handed down at a later date.

Another ex-employee charged

"The evidence showed that, for money and when he thought he was doing this out of sight, the defendant sold his job [as a Twitter employee] to a close friend" of the Saudi royal family, Federal prosecutor Colin Sampson told the jury last week after a two-week trial.

Ahmad Abouammo was arrested in Seattle in November 2019. The prosecution accuses him, as well as another former Twitter employee, a Saudi named Ali Alzabarah, of having been approached by Riad at the end of 2014-beginning of 2015 in order to transmit user data accessible only internally (email address, telephone number, date of birth, etc.).

Ahmad Abouammo left Twitter in 2015. Ali Alzabarah left the United States.

100,000 dollars and a luxury watch

Angela Chuang, Ahmad Abouammo's lawyer, admitted that a Saudi operation could have been set up seven years ago to obtain information about opponents from Twitter employees.

But according to her, her client was tried instead of Ali Alzabarah.

"It's obvious that the defendants the government was looking for are not there," she said.

For its part, Twitter accuses its former employee of not having respected the rules of the company by not declaring to his superiors having received 100,000 dollars and a watch worth more than 40,000 dollars from a close to the Saudi monarchy.

The verdict comes after human rights defenders criticized Joe Biden and Emmanuel Macron for their diplomatic policy towards Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, sidelined from the international scene after the assassination of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi at the consulate from Saudi Arabia to Turkey in 2018. Many NGOs regularly accuse the leader, nicknamed "MBS", and his regime of spying on, kidnapping and torturing dissidents, which Riad denies.

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