After he was shown into the office of the Saudi consul,Mohammad al-Otaibi,the agents seized Khashoggi almost immediately and began to beat and torture him,eventually cutting off his fingers,the senior Turkish official said.
"Do this outside. You will put me in trouble,"al-Otaibi,the consul,told them,according to the Turkish official and the report inYeni Safak,both citing audio recordings said to have been obtained by Turkish intelligence.
"If you want to live when you come back to Arabia,shut up,"one of the agents replied,according to both the official and the newspaper.
"Horrendous tortures were committed on Khashoggi,who came to the consulate for documents,"theYeni Safak account said.
As they cut off Khashoggi's head and dismembered his body,a doctor of forensics who had been brought along for the dissection and disposal had some advice for the others,according to the senior Turkish official.
Listen to music,he told them,as he put on headphones himself. That was what he did to ease the tension when doing such work,the official said,describing the contents of the audio recording.
Such information would not have been disclosed in Turkey without the consent of the government. Turkish media outlets and newspapers are closely controlled:They are either government-controlled or owned by pro-government business executives. Censors are often present in newsrooms,and reporters and editors take close instructions from officials in the presidency.
The Turkish leaks implicating Saudi officials in the Khashoggi case have followed a distinctive pattern,beginning quickly after his disappearance. The leaks stopped when President Donald Trump suggested that he was taking the accusations seriously and sent Pompeo to Saudi Arabia for answers.
But the leaks appeared to resume after Saudi leaders repeated their denials of involvement to Pompeo,and Trump defended the crown prince as having been unfairly accused.
Speaking to reporters at the White House on Wednesday,Trump said the administration had requested access to recorded evidence from the Turkish authorities"if it exists"and that it"probably does."Trump also said he expected to get a full report from Pompeo when he returned.
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Asked whether he'd instructed the FBI to investigate the case,Trump responded:"I'm not going to tell you."
Khashoggi's death has thrown the relationship between the US and Saudi Arabia into turmoil. Trump has cultivated close ties with the country's de facto leader,Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman,and the president has expressed doubt that Prince Mohammed is responsible for Khashoggi's disappearance or knows what happened to the journalist.
Khashoggi,a critic of Prince Mohammed's regime,hasn't been seen since he entered the consulate October 2 to retrieve a document for his planned wedding.
New York Times,Bloomberg