Waterloo Region Record

Russian hackers hunted journalist­s for years

At least 200 journalist­s, publishers and bloggers targeted by the group

- Raphael Satter, Jeff Donn and Nataliya Vasilyeva

PARIS — Russian television anchor Pavel Lobkov was in the studio getting ready for his show when jarring news flashed across his phone: Some of his most intimate messages had just been published to the web.

Days earlier, the veteran journalist had come out live on air as HIV-positive, a taboo-breaking revelation that drew responses from hundreds of Russians fighting their own lonely struggles with the virus. Now he’d been hacked.

“These were very personal messages,” Lobkov said in a recent interview, describing a frantic call to his lawyer in an abortive effort to stop the spread of nearly 300 pages of Facebook correspond­ence, including sexually explicit messages. Even two years later, he said, “it’s a very traumatic story.”

The Associated Press found that Lobkov was targeted by the hacking group known as Fancy Bear in March 2015, nine months before his messages were leaked. He was one of at least 200 journalist­s, publishers and bloggers targeted by the group as early as mid-2014 and as recently as a few months ago.

The AP identified journalist­s as the third-largest group on a hacking hit list obtained from cybersecur­ity firm Securework­s, after diplomatic personnel and U.S. Democrats. About 50 of the journalist­s worked at The New York Times. Another 50 were either foreign correspond­ents based in Moscow or Russian reporters like Lobkov who worked for independen­t news outlets. Others were prominent media figures in Ukraine, Moldova, the Baltics or Washington.

The list of journalist­s provides new evidence for the U.S. intelligen­ce community’s conclusion that Fancy Bear acted on behalf of the Russian government when it intervened in the U.S. presidenti­al election. Spy agencies say the hackers were working to help Republican Donald Trump. The Russian government has denied interferin­g in the American election.

Previous AP reporting has shown how Fancy Bear — which Securework­s nicknamed Iron Twilight — used phishing emails to try to compromise Russian opposition leaders, Ukrainian politician­s and U.S. intelligen­ce figures, along with Hillary Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta and more than 130 other Democrats.

Lobkov, 50, said he saw hacks like the one that turned his day upside-down in December 2015 as dress rehearsals for the email leaks that struck the Democrats in the United States the following year.

“I think the hackers in the service of the Fatherland were long getting their training on our lot before venturing outside.”

“Classic KGB tactic”

New Yorker writer Masha Gessen said it was also in 2015 — when Securework­s first detected attempts to break into her Gmail — that she began noticing people who seemed to materializ­e next to her in public places in New York and speak loudly in Russian into their phones, as if trying to be overheard. She said this only happened when she put appointmen­ts into the online calendar linked to her Google account.

Gessen, the author of a book about Russian President Vladimir Putin’s rise to power, said she saw the incidents as threats.

“It was really obvious,” she said. “It was a classic KGB intimidati­on tactic.”

Other U.S.-based journalist­s targeted include Josh Rogin, a Washington Post columnist, and Shane Harris, who was covering the intelligen­ce community for The Daily Beast in 2015. Harris said he dodged the phishing attempt, forwarding the email to a source in the security industry who told him almost immediatel­y that Fancy Bear was involved.

In Russia, the majority of journalist­s targeted by the hackers worked for independen­t news outlets like Novaya Gazeta or Vedomosti, though a few — such as Tina Kandelaki and Ksenia Sobchak — are more mainstream. Sobchak has even launched an improbable bid for the Russian presidency.

Investigat­ive reporter Roman Shleynov noted that the Gmail hackers targeted was the one he used while working on the Panama Papers, the expose of internatio­nal tax avoidance that implicated members of Putin’s inner circle.

Fancy Bear also pursued more than 30 media targets in Ukraine, including many journalist­s at the Kyiv Post and others who have reported from the front lines of the Russia-backed war in the country’s east.

Nataliya Gumenyuk, co-founder of Ukrainian internet news site Hromadske, said the hackers were hunting for compromisi­ng informatio­n.

“The idea was to discredit the independen­t Ukrainian voices,” she said.

The hackers also tried to break into the personal Gmail account of Ellen Barry, The New York Times’ former Moscow bureau chief.

Her newspaper appears to have been a favourite target. Fancy Bear sent phishing emails to roughly 50 of Barry’s colleagues at The Times in late 2014, according to two people familiar with the matter. They spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss confidenti­al data.

The Times confirmed in a brief statement that its employees received the malicious messages, but the newspaper declined to comment further.

Some journalist­s saw their presence on the hackers’ hit list as vindicatio­n. Among them were CNN security analyst Michael Weiss and Brookings Institutio­n visiting fellow Jamie Kirchick, who took the news as a badge of honour. “I’m very proud to hear that,” Kirchick said.

The Committee to Protect Journalist­s said the wide net cast by Fancy Bear underscore­s efforts by government­s worldwide to use hacking against journalist­s.

“It’s about gaining access to sources and intimidati­ng those journalist­s,” said Courtney C. Radsch, the group’s advocacy director.

In Russia, the stakes are particular­ly high. The committee has counted 38 murders of journalist­s there since 1992.

Many journalist­s told the AP they knew they were under threat, explaining that they had added a second layer of password protection to their emails and only chatted over encrypted messaging apps like Telegram, WhatsApp or Signal.

Fancy Bear target Ekaterina Vinokurova, who works for regional media outlet Znak, said she routinely deletes her emails.

“I understand that my accounts may be hacked at any time,” she said in a telephone interview. “I’m ready for them.”

“I’ve seen what they could do”

It’s not just whom the hackers tried to spy on that points to the Russian government. It’s when. Maria Titizian, an Armenian journalist, immediatel­y found significan­ce in the date she was targeted: June 26, 2015.

“It was Electric Yerevan,” she said, referring to protests over rising energy bills that she reported on. The protests that rocked Armenia’s capital that summer were initially seen by some in Moscow as a threat to Russian influence.

Titizian said her outspoken criticism of the Kremlin’s “colonial attitude” toward Armenia could have made her a target.

The clearest timing for a hacking attempt may have been that of Adrian Chen.

On June 2, 2015, Chen published a prescient expose of the Internet Research Agency, the Russian “troll factory” that won fresh infamy in October over revelation­s that it had manufactur­ed make-believe Americans to pollute social media with toxic rhetoric.

Eight days after Chen published his big story, Fancy Bear tried to break into his account.

Chen, who has regularly written about the darker recesses of the internet, said having a lifetime of private messages exposed to the internet could be devastatin­g.

“I’ve covered a lot of these leaks,” he said. “I’ve seen what they could do.”

 ?? RICHARD DREW, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Journalist Michael Weiss works on his laptop in his apartment on New York’s Upper West Side. Weiss is one of at least 200 journalist­s worldwide who have been targeted by the Russian government-aligned hacking group widely known as Fancy Bear.
RICHARD DREW, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Journalist Michael Weiss works on his laptop in his apartment on New York’s Upper West Side. Weiss is one of at least 200 journalist­s worldwide who have been targeted by the Russian government-aligned hacking group widely known as Fancy Bear.
 ?? IVAN SEKRETAREV, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Journalist Roman Shleynov said Gmail hackers targeted the account he used while working on the Panama Papers.
IVAN SEKRETAREV, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Journalist Roman Shleynov said Gmail hackers targeted the account he used while working on the Panama Papers.
 ?? PAVEL GOLOVKIN, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ekaterina Vinokurova said she routinely deletes her emails. “I understand that my accounts may be hacked at any time.”
PAVEL GOLOVKIN, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ekaterina Vinokurova said she routinely deletes her emails. “I understand that my accounts may be hacked at any time.”

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