The Philippine Star

12 Russians indicted for ’16 US poll meddling

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Twelve Russian military intelligen­ce officers hacked into the Clinton presidenti­al campaign and the Democratic Party and released tens of thousands of private communicat­ions in a sweeping conspiracy by the Kremlin to meddle in the 2016 United States election, according to an indictment announced days before President Donald Trump’s summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The indictment represents special counsel Robert Mueller’s first charges against Russian government officials for interferin­g in American politics, an effort US intelligen­ce agencies said was aimed at helping the Trump campaign and harming his Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton. The case follows a separate indictment that accused Russians of using social media to sow discord among American voters.

The 29-page indictment laid out how, months before Americans went to the polls, Russians schemed to break into key Democratic email accounts, including those belonging to Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta, the Democratic National Committee and the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee. Stolen emails, many politicall­y damaging for Clinton, appeared on WikiLeaks in the campaign’s final stretch.

The charges said the Russian defendants, using a persona known as Guccifer 2.0, in August 2016 contacted a person in touch with the Trump campaign to offer help. They said that on the same day, Trump, in a speech, urged Russia to find Clinton’s missing emails, Russian hackers tried for the first time to break into email accounts used by her personal office.

Mueller did not allege that Trump campaign associates were involved in the hacking effort, that Americans were knowingly in touch with Russian intelligen­ce officers or that any vote tallies were altered by hacking. The White House seized on those points in a statement that offered no condemnati­on of Russian election interferen­ce.

It was unclear whether the indictment might factor into Trump’s meeting with Putin on Monday.

Trump has repeatedly expressed skepticism about Russian involvemen­t in the hacking while being accused by Democrats of cozying up to the Russian president. Trump complained about the Russia investigat­ion hours before the indictment, saying the “stupidity” was making it “very hard to do something with Russia.”

Meanwhile, the Kremlin denied anew that it tried to sway the election.

“The Russian state has never interfered and has no intention of interferin­g in the US elections,” Putin’s foreign affairs adviser Yuri Ushakov said on Friday.

The indictment identifies the defendants as officers with Russia’s Main Intelligen­ce Directorat­e of the General Staff, also known as GRU. If that link is establishe­d, it would shatter the Kremlin denials of the Russian state’s involvemen­t in the US elections, given that the GRU is part of the state machine.

The Russian defendants are not in custody, and it is not clear if they will ever appear in American court, though the Justice Department has recently seen value in indicting foreign hackers in absentia as public deterrence.

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