Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Russian denounces U.S. claim in troll-farm case

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MOSCOW — A top Russian diplomat says the U.S. allegation that a Russian woman helped oversee a social media effort to influence the 2018 U.S. midterm elections is shameful.

Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov made the comments in a statement Saturday, a day after U.S. prosecutor­s filed a criminal complaint against Elena Khusyaynov­a. The complaint says she helped oversee the finances at a “troll farm” aiming to influence U.S. politics through social media.

The operation is one of those also named in an indictment this year for allegedly interferin­g in the 2016 U.S. election.

“Washington, having spread shameless lies about the mythical ‘hand of Moscow’ for more than two years, is now trying to play the same card ahead of the approachin­g U.S. Election Day,” Ryabkov said in the statement.

The troll farm, the Internet Research Agency, is one of a web of companies allegedly controlled by Yevgeny Prigozhin, who has reported ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The Internet news site Federal News Agency, also linked to Prigozhin, said Friday that Khusyaynov­a was its head bookkeeper and had worked with the company since its inception in 2014. But it dismissed the allegation of her involvemen­t in election meddling, saying “probably a closer look should be taken at the cleaners and the pizza deliverer.”

Other than her employment, little was publicly known about the 44-year-old Khusyaynov­a.

According to the Russian bailiffs’ database, Khusyaynov­a owes about $167,000 for bailiff fees in debt-recovery cases from recent years. How she incurred the debts or their total amount was not stated.

The independen­t newspaper Novaya Gazeta reported that a bank in 2015 filed to recover about $130,000 in debt and a court ordered foreclosur­e on a residence she owned in the Russian city of St. Petersburg.

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