Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Stolen cash returned to Wisconsin GOP

Federal investigat­ion continues into hackers’ $2.3M theft before ’20 election

- SCOTT BAUER

MADISON, Wis. — All of the $2.3 million stolen from the Wisconsin Republican Party by hackers just before the 2020 presidenti­al election has been recovered, including nearly $600,000 obtained by the FBI and given back to the party last month, the state party chairman said Tuesday.

The state GOP noticed suspicious activity on Oct. 22, 2020, and contacted the FBI a day later, less than two weeks before Election Day.

The party determined that the money had been taken from the account it was using to help try to re-elect President Donald Trump. He went on to lose Wisconsin to President Joe Biden by less than 21,000 votes.

The investigat­ion into the theft is ongoing, Wisconsin party executive director Mark Jefferson said.

“We understand that the investigat­ion remains active and what determinat­ions have been made on holding those responsibl­e accountabl­e, we are not privy to at this time,” Jefferson said.

Leonard Peace, a spokesman for the FBI in Wisconsin, did not immediatel­y return a message.

The hackers manipulate­d invoices from four vendors who were being paid for direct mail for Trump’s re-election efforts as well as for pro-Trump material such as hats to be handed out to supporters, Andrew Hitt, the Republican Party executive director at the time, said in 2020.

Invoices and other documents were altered so when the party paid them, the money went to the hackers instead of the vendors, Hitt said.

The party has increased its cybersecur­ity operations over the past two years and it has not been hacked again, although there have been numerous attempts, Jefferson said. That work includes contractin­g with an outside agency to help train party employees, he said.

“Cybersecur­ity has only become more of a problem over the past two years,” he said.

The FBI returned just under $600,000 to the party on April 14, which was listed on campaign finance forms as a “recovery of fraudulent transfer.”

The fraud unit with the party’s bank was able to recover $1.5 million over the past 18 months, Jefferson said. The rest of what was stolen was replaced either through insurance payments or fundraisin­g targeted to help recover from the theft, he said.

 ?? (AP/Morry Gash) ?? Former President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign event at the Kenosha Regional Airport on Nov. 2, 2020, in Kenosha, Wis.
(AP/Morry Gash) Former President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign event at the Kenosha Regional Airport on Nov. 2, 2020, in Kenosha, Wis.

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