The Day

Trump seizes on report that Russian sold ‘phony secrets’ about him to U.S.

- By SHANE HARRIS and ELLEN NAKASHIMA

President Donald Trump responded Saturday to a news report alleging that U.S. spies paid a Russian who claimed he could provide classified informatio­n stolen from the National Security Agency and promised compromisi­ng informatio­n about the president and his connection­s to Russia.

“According to the [New York Times], a Russian sold phony secrets on ‘Trump’ to the U.S.,” Trump wrote in a Twitter message. “Asking price was $10 million, brought down to $1 million to be paid over time. I hope people are now seeing & understand­ing what is going on here. It is all now starting to come out — DRAIN THE SWAMP!”

The report said that U.S. officials didn’t want the informatio­n about Trump, who didn’t address the attempt to retrieve the classified National Security Agency material, which was considered extraordin­arily important to intelligen­ce operations.

In his tweet, Trump appeared to refer to his longstandi­ng accusation that intelligen­ce agencies are trying discredit him by investigat­ing his connection­s to Russia.

Possible Trump campaign ties to Russia are being scrutinize­d by special counsel Robert Mueller, who is also investigat­ing whether the president or any of his aides tried to obstruct an investigat­ion into Russia’s interferen­ce in the 2016 election.

The president has called the Russia investigat­ion a “witch hunt.”

U.S. officials have said that informatio­n stolen from the NSA included computer code used in classified government hacking operations. That informatio­n was obtained by a group calling itself the Shadow Brokers, which officials privately say they believe is connected to Russia.

The intelligen­ce community was involved in an effort to investigat­e and determine whether it could gain access to stolen government data, according to a U.S. official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive matters. It was determined later that the offer was bogus and the people behind it couldn’t produce any of the stolen government data, this official said.

The Times reported Friday that “after months of secret negotiatio­ns,” a Russian with suspected ties to the country’s intelligen­ce apparatus and to Eastern European criminals “bilked American spies out of $100,000 last year.”

The Russian had promised to deliver the stolen computer code, the Times said. But officials determined that informatio­n he was offering already had been published online.

The CIA declined to pay for it, the Times reported. But in September, an American businessma­n delivered a $100,000 payment. “Some officials said it was United States government money but routed through an indirect channel,” the newspaper reported.

A CIA spokesman disputed the Times report and one in the Intercept that the U.S. intelligen­ce community had looked into whether it could obtain the NSA data and also had been offered damaging informatio­n about Trump.

“The fictional story that CIA was bilked out of $100,000 is patently false,” the spokesman said.

An NSA spokeswoma­n said, “The NSA flatly denies that it paid any money to anyone as alleged in the New York Times story.”

Early in the negotiatio­ns, the Russian had asked $10 million for the NSA material but then dropped his asking price to just over $1 million, sparking concerns among U.S. officials that his real intent might be to feed them false informatio­n about Trump to discredit him or the special counsel’s investigat­ion and the intelligen­ce community, the Times reported.

The Washington Post could not verify claims of any money changing hands. And it wasn’t clear why an intelligen­ce agency would pay for informatio­n that it hadn’t verified first, because that would fly in the face of routine intelligen­ce tradecraft.

 ?? TIM MARTIN/THE DAY ?? Felicia Hurley, left, of Salem instructs a workshop on African drumming in the Harris Place Atrium in New London on Saturday. Her grandmothe­r Cynthia Priestley of Salem looks on.
TIM MARTIN/THE DAY Felicia Hurley, left, of Salem instructs a workshop on African drumming in the Harris Place Atrium in New London on Saturday. Her grandmothe­r Cynthia Priestley of Salem looks on.

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