Saudi Who Claims Crown Prince Wants Him Killed Wins A Legal Step
A U.S. judge ordered Air Canada and Lufthansa to preserve
travel records for use as evidence by a former high-level Saudi official who
claims Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman is trying to have him killed.
U.S. District Judge Timothy Kelly in Washington ruled the
files must be available for use by the former official, Saad Aljabri, in the
event that his lawsuit against the crown prince survives a pending motion to
toss it out.
"The records facing potential destruction are important
enough to this case such that their loss would cause irreparable harm to plaintiff,"
Kelly said in the decision Thursday.
Aljabri's suit, filed in August 2020, accuses Prince
Mohammed of deploying operatives in the U.S. to track him down and then
dispatching a team to murder him, weeks after the assassination of Washington
Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi, allegedly on the orders of the Saudi royal.
Aljabri argues the airline records will show the movement of
his would-be killers, making them crucial to case. He had asked for permission
to subpoena the airlines to get immediate access to the data, but Kelly said it
was too early for that because he hasn't yet ruled on a request to dismiss the
suit.
The prince's lawyer, Michael K. Kellogg, declined to
comment.
Aljabri is suing Prince Mohammed -- the de facto ruler of
Saudi Arabia, who is often referred to as MBS -- under the Torture Victim
Protection Act and the Alien Tort Statute, which give the U.S. court system
jurisdiction over lawsuits alleging certain types of offenses in other
countries. He alleges MBS has had two of his children kidnapped in Saudi Arabia
and that the prince has threatened others to draw him out of hiding.
Over decades of service in the Saudi government, Aljabri
said in the suit, he became privy to sensitive information about Prince
Mohammed's "covert political scheming within the Royal Court" as well
as his business dealings and his role in creating a team of operatives to kill
Khashoggi.
The case is Aljabri v. Mohammed bin Salman, 1:20-cv-02146,
U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia (Washington).
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