The Commercial Appeal

US charges 7 Russian intel agents

Hacking plot linked to Olympic doping scandal

- Bart Jansen USA TODAY

WASHINGTON – Seven Russian intelligen­ce officers were charged with hacking computers associated with 250 athletes and anti-doping sports organizati­ons in the U.S. and around the world, Justice Department officials announced Thursday.

The criminal activity described in the 41-page indictment came in retaliatio­n for people and groups who revealed Russia’s doping program for its athletes – revelation­s that led to stripping dozens of Olympic medals from Russian athletes and banning its athletes from the 2016 Summer Olympics.

The hacking that began in December 2014 and continued until at least May 2018 intruded into computers of U.S. citizens and corporatio­ns, plus internatio­nal firms and their workers around the world, officials said.

“In other words, Russia cheated,” said Scott Brady, U.S. attorney for western Pennsylvan­ia. “They cheated, they got caught, they were banned from the Olympics, they were mad, and they retaliated. In retaliatin­g, they broke the law, so they are criminals.”

The conspiracy aimed to publicize stolen informatio­n as part of an influence and disinforma­tion campaign designed to undermine and retaliate against anti-doping organizati­ons and officials who had publicly exposed a Russian state-sponsored athlete doping program, officials said. Another goal was to damage the reputation­s of athletes around the world by falsely claiming they were using performanc­eenhancing drugs, officials said.

Russia’s Foreign Ministry rejected the accusation­s as “propaganda.”

The charges were related to an intelligen­ce operation against Russian agents in The Hague attempting to breach the cybersecur­ity of the Organizati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons, which Dutch and British officials announced Thursday.

The latest charges follow indictment­s earlier this year against 12 Russian intelligen­ce officers and 13 Russian nationals and businesses. Those stemmed from special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion of interferen­ce in the 2016 election.

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