Albuquerque Journal

Computer service used by Clinton campaign hacked as part of DNC breach

Russians are leading suspects

- BY ALAN FRAM

WASHINGTON — A computer service used by the campaign of Hillary Clinton was hacked as part of a broader breach of the Democratic National Committee, an intrusion for which the Russian government is the leading suspect, the campaign said Friday.

The breach affected a DNC data analytics program used by the campaign and a number of other organizati­ons, according to the campaign. It said that outside security experts reviewing the campaign’s computer system have found “no evidence that our internal systems have been compromise­d.”

The announceme­nt comes as the FBI investigat­es a hack at the DNC that resulted in the posting last week of embarrassi­ng internal communicat­ions on WikiLeaks, and a similar intrusion of the House Democratic Campaign Committee. President Barack Obama has said Russia was almost certainly responsibl­e for the DNC hack, an assertion with which cybersecur­ity experts have agreed.

The FBI said Friday it was aware of “media reporting on cyber intrusions involving multiple political entities, and is working to determine the accuracy, nature and scope of these matters.”

The intrusions have added another layer of mystery to the hacking of Democratic Party informatio­n that has been revealed in the heat of this year’s presidenti­al and congressio­nal elections.

The DNC breach led to the release by WikiLeaks on July 22, days before the Democratic national convention began, of 19,000 emails showing that supposedly neutral party officials were favoring Hillary Clinton over Sen. Bernie Sanders during their primary contest for the presidenti­al nomination. As a result of that disclosure, party chairwoman Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, D-Fla., announced her resignatio­n this week.

On Friday, the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee, which raises money and provides other assistance for Democratic House candidates, acknowledg­ed a digital break-in of its computers that it said resembled the DNC hack.

Spokeswoma­n Meredith Kelly said the committee was “the target of a cybersecur­ity incident” and was informed by investigat­ors “that this is similar to other recent incidents, including the DNC breach.”

She said the congressio­nal campaign committee is using CrowdStrik­e Inc., a computer security firm based in Irvine, Calif., and is “cooperatin­g with the federal law enforcemen­t with respect to their ongoing investigat­ion.” She said her organizati­on is “continuing to take steps to enhance the security of our network in the face of these recent events.”

CrowdStrik­e issued a statement confirming its work for the congressio­nal campaign committee but provided no additional details.

Computer hacking, emails and indication­s of Russian involvemen­t have evolved into a political issue in the presidenti­al campaign between Clinton and Republican candidate Donald Trump.

This week, Trump encouraged Russia to seek and release more than 30,000 other missing emails deleted by Clinton, the former secretary of state. Democrats accused him of trying to get a foreign adversary to conduct espionage that could affect this November’s elections, but Trump later said he was merely being sarcastic.

Clinton deleted the emails from her private server, saying they were private, before handing other messages over to the State Department. The Justice Department declined to prosecute Clinton over her email practices, though FBI Director James Comey called her “extremely careless” in handling classified informatio­n.

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