New York Post

Red menace

13 Russians indicted for meddling in 2016 election

- By BOB FREDERICKS

The feds dropped a bombshell on the White House Friday, revealing the indictment­s of 13 Russians — one a close pal of Vladimir Putin — for sabotaging the presidenti­al election to boost Donald Trump and slime Hillary Clinton.

The Justice Department’s stunning announceme­nt alleged that the sophistica­ted skuldugger­y began in 2014 and involved the creation of social-media accounts on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter by more than 80 Russians working day and night.

The accounts were made to look like they were created by ordinary, grassroots American activists but sought to sow political and racial discord and disrupt the nation’s democracy.

“The defendants allegedly conducted what they called in- formation warfare against the United States with the stated goal of spreading distrust towards the candidates and the political system in general,” Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein told reporters.

“We must not allow them to succeed,” a stone-faced Rosenstein warned, adding that the case “serves as a reminder that people are not always who they appear to be on the Internet.”

Rosenstein said there was no informatio­n in the indictment alleging that any Americans contacted by the Russians were aware of the operation, or that the Russians’ efforts determined the election’s outcome.

But he stressed that special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe was ongoing.

Signed by Mueller, the 37page, eight-count indictment also charged three businesses.

“By early to mid-2016, defen- dants’ operations included supporting the presidenti­al campaign of then-candidate Donald J. Trump . . . and disparagin­g Hillary Clinton,” the indictment charged.

The feds said the individual­s were given $1.25 million a month by a Russian oligarch known as “Putin’s chef,” Yevgeniy Viktorovic­h Prigozhin through a company known as Concord Catering.

Prigozhin, 56, and Concord Catering are charged in the indictment, as is another Prigozhin company, Concord Management and Consulting.

The feds said the Russians even taunted the US by hiring an unsuspecti­ng American to stand in front of the White House on May 29, 2016 — Prigozhin’s birthday — holding a sign that said, “Happy Birthday Dear Boss.”

Prigozhin scoffed at the charges.

“The Americans are really impression­able people. They see what they want to see. I greatly respect them. If they want to see the devil — let them see him,” he told Russian media.

The Russians also hired another clueless American to attend rallies dressed as Clinton in a striped prison suit while sitting on a flatbed truck in a cage.

On social media, they created pages with such names as Blacktivis­t, United Muslims of America and Army of Jesus that spread inflammato­ry disinforma­tion about Clinton,

The United Muslims page, for example, accused her of favoring Sharia law.

Another page, called Woke Blacks, urged African-Americans not to vote — an effort to hurt the Democrat at the polls.

“A particular hype and hatred

for Trump is misleading the people and forcing Blacks to vote for Killary. We cannot resort to the lesser of two devils. Then we’d surely be better off if we did not vote at all,” one post read.

One typical ad they placed on social media in September 2016 read, “Hillary is a Satan, and her crimes and lies had proved just how evil she is.”

A Twitter account linked to the Russians claimed to be from Tennessee Republican­s. A number of American politician­s, celebritie­s and journalist­s shared the bogus group’s tweets.

Among those who retweeted posts from @Ten_GOP were ex-National Security Adviser Mike Flynn, Trump crony Roger Stone, rapper Nicki Minaj, actor James Woods and conservati­ve columnist Ann Coulter.

Facebook and Twitter took heat from the feds for failing to quickly spot the phony Russian accounts. The social-media giants acknowledg­ed only last fall that they had been duped.

“The nature of the scheme was the defendants took extraordin­ary steps to make it appear that they were ordinary American political activists,” Rosenstein said.

The third indicted company, Internet Research Agency — a “troll farm” based in St. Petersburg — “had a strategic goal to sow discord in the US political system, including the 2016 US presidenti­al election,” the indictment said.

In a related action, it was disclosed that a California man, Richard Pinedo, 28, pleaded guilty this month to using stolen identities to set up bank accounts that were used by the Russians.

Friday’s indictment charges all of the defendants with conspiracy to defraud the US and three others with conspiracy to com- mit wire fraud and bank fraud, and five defendants with aggravated identity theft.

None of the Russians was arrested, and Russia was not expected to hand them over. Still, they cannot visit the US without risking arrest and could face arrest if caught on an ally’s soil.

Trump cast the indictment as a vindicatio­n of himself.

“Russia started their anti-US campaign in 2014, long before I announced that I would run for President. The results of the election were not impacted. The Trump campaign did nothing wrong — no collusion!” he tweeted en route to his Mar-aLago resort in Palm Beach, Fla.

Trump added in a statement that “far-fetched theories” about collusion in the 2016 election “only serve to further the agendas of bad actors, like Russia.”

“It’s time we stop the outlandish partisan attacks. We must unite as Americans to protect the integrity of our democracy and our elections,” he added.

Moments after the indictment­s were released, Trump’s campaign sent out an e-mail seeking donations to fight “fake news.”

“America is waking up to the fake news. We’re waking up to the lies liberals have been feeding our country for decades. We are still fighting to take our country, and we will not rest,” the mass e-mail read.

The indictment­s are the most significan­t developmen­t in Mueller’s ongoing probe into Russian meddling.

Trump has repeatedly dismissed charges that Russia interfered in the election, calling it a “hoax” and “fake news” — despite agreement among the US intelligen­ce community that Russia interfered to help him in his race against Clinton.

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