Khashoggi's Widow on "Jamal, Inc." (Feat. Hanan Elatr and Randa Fahmy)

The fourth anniversary of Jamal Khashoggi’s death has passed, and the public's understanding of his murder continues to evolve. The struggle for information about the incident continues, and leading some of those fights is his widow: Hanan Elatr, who married Khashoggi in Virginia just months before he died. On the latest episode of “Objections,” Ms. Elatr Khashoggi and her lawyer Randa Fahmy detail their various battles for information. They have threatened a lawsuit against the NSO Group, the maker of spyware that the Washington Post reportedly found on Elatr’s phone before her late husband’s murder. They have requested the return of Khashoggi’s electronic devices from the Turkish government and asked President Biden’s Director of National Intelligence to exert pressure on Ankara for that to happen.After years of seemingly being written out of Khashoggi’s story, Elatr has become increasingly vocal in changing the perception of his legacy.On the podcast, Elatr says the slain Washington Post reporter never viewed himself as a Saudi dissident — and she lashes out at a phenomenon she describes as “Jamal, Inc.,” the various interests she accuses of capitalizing on her late husband’s legacy.  GUESTS: Elatr Khashoggi: Jamal Khashoggi's widow. SUBSCRIBE TO OUR OTHER PODCASTS: Court Junkie Sidebar They Walk Among America Coptales and Cocktails The Disturbing Truth Speaking Freely See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Always Relevant, Never Hearsay, Sometimes Argumentative. In each episode of Objections, Adam Klasfeld navigates listeners through the top legal stories of the week with experts in a straightforward, analytical and factual manner. Klasfeld is a senior investigative reporter and editor for Law&Crime. Adam has reported on every corner of the legal system for more than a decade, with datelines from federal courts, state courts, the United Nations, Guantánamo Bay, the Ecuadorean Amazon, and a court-martial inside a military base near NSA headquarters.