Los Angeles Times

7 Russian intelligen­ce officers indicted by U.S.

Justice Department and Western nations allege hacking and other cybercrime­s.

- By Laura King and Sabra Ayres

WASHINGTON — Painting a portrait of Russian cybercrime­s spanning the globe, the Justice Department on Thursday charged seven Russian intelligen­ce officers with targeting an internatio­nal chemical weapons watchdog agency, a nuclear energy company in Pennsylvan­ia and the keepers of Olympic athletes’ drug-testing data.

Moscow scoffed at the charges, which came hours after British, Dutch and Australian officials alleged a similarly wide-ranging pattern of “brazen” conduct by Russia’s GRU military spy agency. They cited dozens of cyber intrusions, including hacking and online propaganda intended to sway the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election.

Other alleged acts included Russian hacking or attempted hacking of the investigat­ion of the downing of a Malaysia Airlines passenger jet in eastern Ukraine in 2014 and of inquiries into the attempted assassinat­ion in March of a turncoat Russian spy in Britain with a nerve agent.

The seven charged in the U.S. indictment are all Russian citizens. Four are GRU agents who were previously expelled from the Netherland­s. It’s unlikely they will ever face a U.S. courtroom.

Still, the volume of accusation­s — backed by digital fingerprin­ts and on-theground surveillan­ce of alleged Russian spy teams — represents a concerted Western effort to confront Moscow over its systemic hacking and other suspected clandestin­e aggression.

The evidence is awkward for President Trump, who has sought to downplay Russian involvemen­t in the U.S. election. He has repeatedly said “others” could be responsibl­e as well, and his administra­tion has repeatedly alleged that China was attempting to interfere in the 2018 midterm election.

U.S. officials said the indictment shows that the Kremlin thought — wrongly — that it could easily cover its digital tracks.

The defendants “believed that they could use their perceived anonymity to act with impunity, in their own countries and on territorie­s of other sovereign nations, to undermine internatio­nal institutio­ns to distract from their government’s own malfeasanc­e,” said John Demers, assistant attorney general for national security.

Russia’s Foreign Ministry, which commonly responds to accusation­s of wrongdoing outside its borders with derision or claims of an anti-Russian conspiracy, mocked the West’s “spy mania.”

“The abuse of this topic has reached such proportion­s and has acquired such scope that the very bringing of these charges makes their validity doubtful,” Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov told reporters in Moscow.

Britain and Moscow had sparred for months over the poisoning of Sergei Skripal, a former Russian intelligen­ce operative who has lived in Britain since he was handed over in a spy swap. British authoritie­s recently unveiled surveillan­ce video of two men they said had poisoned Skripal and his daughter in the English cathedral town of Salisbury.

The pair, said to be GRU officers, were swiftly identified. They later appeared on Russian TV and denied the charges.

U.S. Defense Secretary James N. Mattis, who was meeting NATO allies in Brussels as the allegation­s were unspooling in Western capitals, said Russia would “have to be held to account.”

“Basically, the Russians got caught with their equipment, people who were doing it, and they have got to pay the piper,” Mattis said. He did not say what retaliator­y steps or countermea­sures might be taken.

“The investigat­ion leading to the indictment­s announced today is the FBI at its best,” FBI Director Christophe­r A. Wray said in a statement. The defendants’ “actions extended beyond borders, but so did the FBI’s investigat­ion.”

The indictment describes a striking array of cyber-spycraft methods used by the Russian agents — fictitious personas, proxy servers, spear-phishing emails and malware commandand-control servers.

When remote hacking didn’t work, “teams of GRU technical intelligen­ce officers … traveled to locations around the world where targets were physically located,” the indictment said. These “close-access” teams then used tactics such as logging onto WiFi networks being used by their targets.

Some of the charges focus on events that rocked the sports world, and showed how far the Kremlin would go to avenge what it considered internatio­nal humiliatio­n of its athletes.

More than 100 Russian athletes were banned from the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro after the World Anti-Doping Agency, or WADA, issued a report filled with damning detail on Russia’s state-sponsored campaign to circumvent drug-testing procedures surroundin­g the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi, Russia.

Russian agents then hacked WADA files and leaked confidenti­al data on U.S. athletic stars, the indictment said, including the tennis-playing Williams sisters, Serena and Venus, and Simone Biles, the gold-medal-winning gymnast.

Some of the most comprehens­ive details came from the Netherland­s, where officials provided photos and a precise timeline of Russian agents’ efforts to target the Organizati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons in The Hague.

The organizati­on was studying the nerve agent Novichok, used against Skripal and his daughter, and was also investigat­ing the alleged use of chemical warfare agents in Syria by forces loyal to President Bashar Assad, whom Russia supports.

Dutch officials also said Russian spies tried to hack investigat­ors looking into the 2014 downing of a Malaysia Airlines flight over eastern Ukraine, which killed nearly 300 people, many of them Dutch. Investigat­ors say the ground-toair missile that brought down the jet was supplied by a Russian military unit.

The defendants included four members of an elite Russian military hacking center known as Unit 26165. They were identified as Aleksei Sergeyevic­h Morenets, 41; Evgenii Mikhaylovi­ch Serebriako­v, 37; Ivan Sergeyevic­h Yermakov, 32; Artem Andreyevic­h Malyshev, 30; and Dmitriy Sergeyevic­h Badin, 27. Alleged GRU officers Oleg Mikhaylovi­ch Sotnikov, 46, and Alexey Valerevich Minin, 46, were also indicted.

Each of the seven was charged with conspiracy to commit computer fraud and abuse, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, and conspiracy to commit money laundering. Five of the seven were also charged with aggravated identity theft.

laura.king@latimes.com sabra.ayres@latimes.com Times staff writer King reported from Washington and special correspond­ent Ayres from Moscow.

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