Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Russian election plot touched even minor Trump supporters

- By Catherine Lucey

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — The request was simple: Organize or attend a sign-waving rally supporting Donald Trump. But some of the Florida Republican­s on the receiving end of those requests now know that they didn’t come from Republican allies but from Russian adversarie­s.

Caught up in an elaborate Russian plot without their knowledge, a handful of these small-time Trump supporters said their votes were not swayed and they didn’t do anything they weren’t happy to do. Still, their interactio­ns with the Russians highlight the ways that the nation’s campaign process was infiltrate­d.

“I was going to do what I was going to do anyway. I was a Trump supporter, they didn’t convince me,” said Jim Frishe, a real estate developmen­t consultant and candidate for county office, who organized a sign-waving event in Clearwater that was part of a statewide series of rallies promoted by the Russians.

The Florida rallies are one small facet of the indictment issued Friday by special counsel Robert Mueller charging 13 Russians and three Russian companies with interferin­g in the 2016 election. The most detailed allegation of illegal Russian meddling to date, it says they assumed U.S. identities, sowed discord on social media, communicat­ed with “unwitting” Americans and even set up political rallies from afar.

As part of that, the indictment says the Russians used a Facebook group, a Twitter account and other “false U.S. personas” to organize coordinate­d “Florida Goes Trump” rallies on Aug. 20, 2016. They reached out to campaign staff, grass-roots groups supporting Trump, and specific individual­s to participat­e.

Frishe, 68, said he was called by someone identifyin­g themselves as with a group called “Florida for Trump” and asked to organize a sign-waving rally. He said 15 to 18 people showed up and that he didn’t receive any signs or money or other support. He never heard from them again.

He said he was not overly concerned about the indictment, or his minor role in the drama and that Russian interferen­ce is “nothing new.”

Still, the indictment details a sizable effort to disrupt the 2016 presidenti­al election, aimed in part at helping Trump defeat Democrat Hillary Clinton. It involved creating internet postings in the names of Americans whose identities had been stolen; staging political rallies while posing as American political activists; and paying people in the U.S. to promote or disparage candidates.

Lilia Morraz also put together an event. She said she got involved after she encountere­d the @March_for_Trump account on Twitter, one of the accounts the Russians used.

Morraz was skeptical about a Russian plot. “I just don’t believe it,” she said.

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