Austin American-Statesman

FBI probes DNC hacking; Clinton team faults Russia

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The FBI said WASHINGTON — Monday it is investigat­ing how thousands of Demo- cratic National Committee

emails were hacked, a breach that Hillary Clinton’s campaign maintains was committed by Russia to benefit Donald Trump.

A statement from the FBI confirmed that it is “investigat­ing a cyber intrusion involving the DNC,” adding

that “a compromise of this nature is something we take very seriously.”

Wikileaks posted emails Friday that suggested the DNC was favoring Clinton over her rival Sen. Bernie Sanders during the primary season. Clinton’s campaign pointed to a massive hack- ing of DNC computers in June that cybersecur­ity firms linked to the Russian government.

Clinton campaign chair- man John Podesta added fuel to the debate Monday, saying there was “a kind of bromance going on” between Russian President Vladimir Putin and Trump. The Clinton campaign says Russia favors Trump’s views, espe- cially on NATO.

Trump on Monday dismissed as a “joke” claims by Hillary Clinton’s campaign

that Russia is trying to help Trump by leaking thousands of emails from the Democratic National Committee.

“The new joke in town is that Russia leaked the disastrous DNC emails, which should have never been writ- ten (stupid), because Putin likes me,” Trump wrote as part of a series of Tweets. “Hillary was involved in the email scandal because she is the only one with judgement (sic) so bad that such a thing could have happened.”

The hacking enraged die- hard Sanders supporters who have long claimed that the DNC had its finger on the scale throughout the primaries.

The disclosure­s prompted the resignatio­n of DNC Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman

Schultz on the eve of the party’s convention in Philadelph­ia, where Clinton is expected to officially accept the nomination for president.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear how WikiLeaks received copies of the internal Democratic emails.

Democratic Party officials learned in late April that their systems had been attacked after they discovered malicious software on their computers.

A cybersecur­ity firm they employed found traces of at least two sophistica­ted hacking groups on the Democrats’ network — both of which have ties to the Russian government.

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