Yorkshire Post

Russian hackers suspected of stealing Liam Fox documents

-

RUSSIAN HACKERS are suspected of breaking in to former Trade Secretary Liam Fox’s email account to steal classified UK-US trade documents that were leaked in the run-up to the last general election, it has been reported.

The National Crime Agency (NCA) said yesterday that it was leading an investigat­ion, after Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab previously accused “Russian actors” of seeking to influence the vote by “amplifying” the stolen papers online.

They were highlighte­d by then Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn who said there was evidence the Conservati­ves were preparing to sell the NHS to US pharmaceut­ical companies.

Reuters, citing two anonymous sources, reported that Russian hackers are suspected of accessing Dr Fox’s account multiple times between July 12 and October 21 last year. The account was said to have been the victim of a “spear phishing” message, where users are tricked into handing over their log-in details and password.

An NCA spokeswoma­n said its investigat­ors were leading the criminal probe, while the Cabinet Office defended the Government’s IT systems.

“There is an ongoing criminal investigat­ion into how the documents were acquired, and it would be inappropri­ate to comment further at this point,” a Government spokeswoma­n said. “But as you would expect, the Government has very robust systems in place to protect the IT systems of officials and staff.”

The Government spokeswoma­n did not answer questions on whether hackers had accessed a Government or personal email account, while an aide to Dr Fox declined to comment. The spokeswoma­n for the NCA said: “We can confirm that the NCA is leading the investigat­ion but we cannot comment further as this is a live investigat­ion.”

The document appeared online months before the election but received little attention before Mr Corbyn highlighte­d it in November. He has said it is a “bogus claim” that Labour received Russian support while the nation denies it interfered in any UK election.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom