The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Mystery: Who bought websites implying US senators ‘for sale’

- By Tami Abdollah

WASHINGTON » Dozens of web addresses implying U.S. senators were “for sale” have been quietly and mysterious­ly purchased online, amid heightened concerns on Capitol Hill that foreign agents — especially Russians — might be trying to meddle in upcoming midterm elections.

An Associated Press investigat­ion found the responsibl­e party: Democrats.

The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee acknowledg­ed to the AP that it had quietly purchased the addresses, which use a new internet suffix “forsale,” in March for at least 27 incumbent senators facing re-election this fall and in 2020, without telling the senators. The cybersecur­ity director for the sergeant-at-arms, the highest-ranking U.S. law enforcemen­t officer in the Senate, has been looking into the matter.

The addresses now controlled by the Democratic political group include the names of mostly Democrats but some prominent Republican­s, too. The group masked its role in the purchase to ensure its identity as the buyer remained anonymous. The current price for such addresses, with a privacy guard, is roughly $18 each.

“It’s a routine campaign practice to purchase URLs to stop bad actors from getting them, and if we eventually decided to develop a URL into a website then there would be a clear disclosure of who was operating it,” said Lauren Passalacqu­a, communicat­ions director at the DSCC.

Buying politicall­y-related web addresses to use them later online — or prevent rival campaigns from using them — has been a routine practice for decades. But Washington has been transfixed by criminal charges filed against Russian military officers accused of secretly meddling in the 2016 presidenti­al campaign, accused by federal prosecutor­s of setting up websites like DCLeaks.com and using anonymous Twitter accounts to peddle embarrassi­ng informatio­n about U.S. politician­s.

U.S. intelligen­ce chief Dan Coats has cautioned that the “warning lights are blinking red” and that “the digital infrastruc­ture that serves this country is literally under attack.”

The mysterious “forsale” purchases set off alarms. AP’s review found roughly 280 political web addresses registered under the “forsale” domain, targeting President Donald Trump, the GOP, Supreme Court and National Rifle Associatio­n, as well as individual Democrats and Republican­s.

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