“At a bare minimum, Crown Prince condoned this behavior and allowed the repetition and escalation of these crimes. He took no action to prevent or punish those responsible. The Crown Prince willingly took the risk that other crimes, such as the killing of Mr. Khashoggi, would be committed, whether or  not he directly ordered the specific crime,” she said.Saudi’s secret trialsSaudi Arabia quietly held a second court hearing early this year for 11 people facing charges in the country over the Khashoggi killing. At the time Callamard criticized the kingdom for its lack of transparency in the proceedings over the grisly slaying. She said she learned of the hearing during her first visit to Turkey to investigate the murder.After denying for weeks that Khashoggi was killed in the consulate, Saudi Arabia late last year indicted 11 people in the killing, including members from the crown prince’s entourage, and is was seeking the death penalty against five of them.Callamard told The Associated Press in February that the second hearing in Saudi Arabia took place on Jan. 31. She criticized the fact that there was “insufficient public attention placed on the proceedings” and that media were not present at the hearings.Trials in Saudi Arabia can be shrouded in secrecy, she noted, insisting that Khashoggi case should be open to public scrutiny.”Given the importance of the case, we should be expecting a greater presence of representatives of the media, of civil society, of a range of other governments, not just those hand-picked by the Saudi authorities,” said Callamard, a French national who is also director of Columbia Global Freedom of Expression at Columbia University in New York.

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