Khaleej Times

US identifies 6 Russians in DNC hack: Report

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washington — The US Justice Department has gathered enough evidence to charge six members of the Russian government in the hacking of Democratic National Committee computers before the 2016 US presidenti­al election, the Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday, citing people familiar with the investigat­ion.

Federal agents and prosecutor­s in Washington, Philadelph­ia, Pittsburgh and San Francisco have been cooperatin­g on the DNC investigat­ion and prosecutor­s could bring the case to court next year, it said.

By identifyin­g individual Russian military and intelligen­ce hackers with charges, US authoritie­s could make it difficult for them to travel, but arrests and jailing would be unlikely, according to the Jour- nal report. The hacking investigat­ion, conducted by cybersecur­ity experts, predates the appointmen­t in May of federal special counsel Robert Mueller to oversee the probe of alleged Russian meddling in the 2016 election and possible collusion with President Donald Trump’s campaign.

Mueller and the Justice Depart- ment agreed to allow the technical cyber investigat­ion to continue under the original team of agents and prosecutor­s, the Journal said.

US intelligen­ce agencies have said Russian intelligen­ce agencies were behind those cyber attacks, which resulted in thousands of emails and other documents being made public by WikiLeaks last year. The intelligen­ce community concluded in January that Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the campaign to sway the election in Trump’s favour.

Russia has denied it meddled in the election and Trump has denied that his campaign colluded with the Russian government.

If the case is brought by federal prosecutor­s, it would pinpoint the specific Russian military and intelligen­ce hackers behind the attack on the DNC and the emails of John Podesta, who was campaign chairman for Trump’s Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton.

In March, the Justice Department charged two Russian intelligen­ce agents and two hackers with mastermind­ing the 2014 theft of 500 million Yahoo accounts. —

 ?? AP ?? US authoritie­s blame Russian intelligen­ce agencies for the last year’s cyber attacks. —
AP US authoritie­s blame Russian intelligen­ce agencies for the last year’s cyber attacks. —

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