New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

6 Russian military officers charged in vast hacking campaign

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WASHINGTON — Six current and former Russian military officers sought to disrupt through computer hacking the French election, the Winter Olympics and U.S. hospitals and businesses, according to a Justice Department indictment unsealed Monday. It details destructiv­e attacks on a broad range of targets and implicates the same Kremlin unit that interfered in the 2016 U.S. election.

The indictment accuses the defendants, all said to be officers in the Russian military agency known as the GRU, in hacks that prosecutor­s say were aimed at furthering the Kremlin’s geopolitic­al interests and as retributio­n against its perceived enemies.

They include attacks against Ukraine’s power grid; a hackand-leak operation directed at the political party of French President Emmanuel Macron in the days leading up to the 2017 election; efforts to punish Olympics organizers who had banned Russian athletes for doping, and to impede an investigat­ion into the suspected nerve-agent poisoning of a former Russian spy and his daughter.

The indictment does not charge the defendants in connection with interferen­ce in American elections, though the officers are part of the same military intelligen­ce unit that prosecutor­s say interfered in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election by hacking Democratic email accounts. One of the six charged in the case announced Monday was among the Russian military intelligen­ce officers charged with hacking in special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into Russian election interferen­ce.

The 50-page indictment, filed in federal court in Pittsburgh, also accuses the hackers of destroying malicious software in 2017 that crippled computers around the globe, including at a Pennsylvan­ia hospital and a pharmaceut­ical company. The criminal conspiracy alleged by the Justice Department enables prosecutor­s to include allegation­s for victims that are not based in the U.S.

None of the six defendants is currently in custody, but the Justice Department in recent years has eagerly charged foreign hacker in absentia with the goal of creating a message of deterrence.

“No country has weaponized its cyber capabiliti­es as maliciousl­y and irresponsi­bly as Russia, wantonly causing unpreceden­ted collateral damage to pursue small tactical advantages as fits of spite,“Assistant Attorney General John Demers, the Justice Department’s top national security official, said at a news conference announcing the case.

The indictment fleshes out details about hacks that in some instances had already received significan­t attention for the havoc they had caused.

The controvers­y known as the “Macron Leaks,“for instance, was the leak of over 20,000 emails linked to Macron’s campaign in the 2017 election in the days before his victory. The involvemen­t of bots raised questions about the possible involvemen­t of Vladimir Putin and the Russian government.

The leaks, which gained huge media attention in France, were shared by WikiLeaks and several Alt-right activists on Twitter, Facebook and others.

After Russia was punished by the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee for a vast doping conspiracy at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, hackers targeted sports agencies around the world.

More than 250 athletes’ medical records were published and confidenti­al data from some of the world’s biggest sports organizati­ons — the Olympics, world track and field, FIFA — were stolen, in what U.S. prosecutor­s said was retaliatio­n for the doping punishment­s.

Other Olympic-related organizati­ons were also hit by hackers: the world track and field body, which suspended Russia from in 2015 over widespread doping; Canada’s anti-doping agency, a trenchant critic of Russia; the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport, which ruled against some Russian athletes.

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