Technology and security experts are disputing the reports from Turkish press, reportedly seeded by Turkish officials, that journalist Jamal Khashoggi’s Apple watch captured audio of him being tortured and killed inside the Saudi Arabian consulate in Istanbul.
News broke that Khashoggi, a Saudi journalist and vocal critic of the Saudi Arabian government, had disappeared after entering the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on October 2. Turkish officials said they believe Khashoggi was murdered inside the consulate. Saudi Arabia has rejected the accusation. Khashoggi’s fate is still unclear.
Turkish newspaper Sabah reported on Saturday that Khashoggi had started recording audio on his Apple Watch when he entered the consulate, and those recordings were beamed to his iPhone which was being held by his fiancée outside the consulate. It said that audio recordings of his torture and murder were sent to the iCloud and his phone, and that his assailants subsequently noticed and unlocked the watch with Khashoggi’s fingerprint, and proceeded to delete some files.
Multiple experts and commentators have flagged up what they view as inaccuracies in the story.
Khashoggi’s Apple Watch is unlikely to have had a cellular connection
Firstly, some pointed out that the watch would not have had access to cellular data because Turkey does not support LTE. Therefore, the watch would not have been able to connect to the internet unless paired with a nearby iPhone or logged onto the embassy’s WiFi.
Given that Khashoggi’s iPhone was with his fiancee outside the embassy, it is likely that the Watch would have been out of range.
The end of the report perhaps poses the biggest problem, because the Apple Watch does not support a Touch ID system, which recognises fingerprints.
Some also pointed to the fact that the Apple Watch does not have a native audio recording app — although it is possible to download one from third-party app makers.
The National correspondent Joyce Karam also said that when she attended an event at the same consulate, she’d been obliged to remove her Fitbit fitness band, making her sceptical that Khashoggi would have been able to retain his Apple Watch.
There is some speculation that the Apple Watch report is a cover story, and the Turkish government had other means of obtaining information about Khashoggi’s disappearance.
One expert suggest the Turkish government might have bugged the consulate. Former CIA officer Robert Baer told CNN, “I think what’s happened, clearly, is the Turks have the Saudi consulate wired, they have transmitters.”
“It seems far more likely that they have other means of detecting what foreign diplomats are up to and the Apple Watch story is just useful cover,” writes the BBC’s technology correspondent Rory Cellan-Jones.
Business Insider has contacted both Apple and the Turkish embassy in London for comment.
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