Prosecutors say that two of the men, who were based in Seattle and San Francisco at the time of their recruitment, were paid hundreds of thousands of dollars by a Saudi-based operative to access data on high-profile Saudi dissidents.
- The U.S.-based assets were not recruited by the main Saudi intelligence agencies, but by a Saudi associated with the crown princes charity and private office, according to BuzzFeed.
The big picture: Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has shifted key intelligence operations to opaque entities under his personal control, as evidenced by the 2018 murder of Saudi regime critic Jamal Khashoggi in Turkey, which was also carried out by units personally loyal to the crown prince.
Where it stands: Only one of the three men is currently in U.S. custody.
- The other formerly U.S.-based operative returned to Saudi Arabia in 2015 after Twitter became suspicious of his activities.
The bottom line: The case underscores the greater focus in recent years by foreign intelligence services on spying in Silicon Valley.
Go deeper: Former Twitter employees charged with spying on behalf of Saudi Arabia