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FBI PROBING ALLEGED IRAN HACK ATTEMPTS TARGETING TRUMP, BIDEN CAMPS

Since June, agents have been pursuing evidence Iran has targeted advisers to the
two presidential campaigns.

6 min
2842
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A reflection of a video screen at a campaign event with former president Donald
Trump at Temple University in June. (Joe Lamberti for The Washington Post)
By Devlin Barrett
, 
Josh Dawsey
, 
Tyler Pager
, 
Isaac Arnsdorf
and 
Shane Harris
Updated August 12, 2024 at 6:06 p.m. EDT|Published August 12, 2024 at 4:44 p.m.
EDT

The FBI is investigating suspected hacking attempts by Iran targeting both a
Trump associate and advisers to the Biden-Harris campaign, according to people
familiar with the matter, as the agency formally acknowledged Monday it has
opened a high-stakes national security investigation months before Election Day.


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in politics.


Three staffers on the Biden-Harris campaign received spear phishing emails that
were designed to appear legitimate but could give an intruder access to the
recipients’ communications, according to people familiar with the matter who
spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe a sensitive investigation. So
far, investigators have not found evidence that those hacking attempts were
successful, these people said.



The FBI began the investigation in June, suspecting Iran was behind the attempts
to steal data from two U.S. presidential campaigns. Agents contacted Google,
among other companies, to discuss what appeared to be a phishing effort
targeting people associated with the Biden campaign, these people said.

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The new details show the investigation is broader and involves more potential
victims than previously known. It also underscores the degree to which hacking
by foreign nations targeting U.S. political candidates may simply be a recurring
feature of politics in the digital age. U.S. officials concluded that Russia
interfered in the 2016 presidential election to help Donald Trump, including by
hacking and releasing internal emails and documents from Democrats.

“We can confirm the FBI is investigating this matter,” the agency said in a
brief statement. On Saturday, the FBI said only that it was aware of media
reports of an alleged hack. The Trump campaign said it had been hacked after
reporters received copies of an internal campaign vetting document on Sen. JD
Vance (R-Ohio), Donald Trump’s running mate.

An official with the Harris campaign said it “vigilantly monitors and protects
against cyberthreats, and we are not aware of any security breaches of our
systems.” The attempted intrusion took place before President Joe Biden
announced that he would not stand for reelection and endorsed Vice President
Kamala Harris, now the Democratic nominee.

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While the FBI suspects Iran is behind the phishing attempts that were tracked in
June, it is less clear to investigators whether the nation is also responsible
for the sending of internal campaign data to reporters, according to people
familiar with the matter. The Washington Post and Politico have both reported
they were contacted by a person claiming to have access to internal Trump
campaign documents who used an AOL account and the name “Robert.” The Trump
campaign has blamed Iran for those leaks.

The FBI investigation raises the stakes for both the presidential contest,
already rife with accusations of dirty tricks and election interference, and the
government’s credibility in assuring a fair election.

When the Trump campaign initially concluded it had been hacked, it did not alert
the FBI, according to campaign advisers. The decision not to alert the FBI was
made partially because of the campaign’s distrust of the agency, the people
said.

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Trump, who blamed Democrats for poor information security when they were hacked
in 2016, has expressed frustration over the hack, these people said.

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People familiar with the matter said the phishing attempt appears to have
succeeded in compromising the communications of at least one person not formally
connected to either campaign: Roger Stone, a longtime friend and adviser to
Trump.

“I was informed by the authorities that a couple of my personal email accounts
have been compromised,” Stone said in a brief interview. “I really don’t know
more about it. And I’m cooperating. It’s all very strange.”

Stone’s account was used to send emails to the Trump campaign containing a link
that, if clicked, could have allowed Iran to intercept the target’s other
emails, the people familiar with the matter said.

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That Stone was an apparent victim in the effort is remarkable given his long,
tangled history with hacked emails. Stone was convicted of seven felonies,
including lying about his attempts during the 2016 presidential campaign to get
details of Hillary Clinton’s private emails from the anti-secrecy group
WikiLeaks. Trump pardoned him in 2020 a month before he left office.

The Trump campaign did not respond to questions about the FBI’s investigation,
but on Saturday spokesman Steven Cheung said the documents received by reporters
“were obtained illegally from foreign sources hostile to the United States,
intended to interfere with the 2024 election and sow chaos throughout our
Democratic process.”

A Trump adviser said additional measures, designed by outside consultants, were
now being taken to secure emails. Staff members have also been instructed not to
put any sensitive documents or information in emails, given that the campaign
believes multiple foreign countries are trying to hack them, this person said.

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Last week, Microsoft issued a public report warning that Iranian hackers had
tried to break into the email account of a “high-ranking official” on a U.S.
presidential campaign in June. The company did not publicly identify the
campaign or confirm whether it believed the hack had been successful, but a
person familiar with Microsoft’s work confirmed that the report’s reference was
to the Trump campaign.

While that evidence is part of what is being investigated by the FBI, it’s now
clear that agents are pursuing a larger set of alleged hacking attempts than
what the Microsoft report describes.

Over the weekend, a spokesman for Iran’s permanent mission to the United Nations
issued a statement dismissing the allegations of such hacking, saying: “We do
not accord any credence to such reports. The Iranian Government neither
possesses nor harbors any intent or motive to interfere in the United States
presidential election.”

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U.S. intelligence officials said in July that Iran is working to stoke societal
discord in the United States and undermine Trump’s bid to regain the White
House, a repeat of Iranian efforts in 2020.

Prosecutors in New York last month also charged a Pakistani man with ties to
Iran in a murder-for-hire plot to assassinate a politician or U.S. government
official on American soil. The alleged Iranian-backed plot, however, had raised
concerns about Trump’s safety in the weeks before the apparently unrelated
attempt on his life at a July rally, according to U.S. officials familiar with
the investigation who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe internal
discussions.


ELECTION 2024

Follow live updates on the 2024 election and candidates Vice President Harris
and former president Donald Trump from our reporters on the campaign trail and
in Washington.

VP picks: Harris has officially secured the Democratic presidential nomination
and chose Walz, a Midwestern Democrat and former high school teacher, to be her
running mate. GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump chose Sen. JD Vance (Ohio),
a rising star in the Republican Party. Here’s where JD Vance and Tim Walz stand
on key policies.

Presidential polls: Check out how Harris and Trump stack up, according to The
Washington Post’s presidential polling averages of seven battleground states.



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2842 Comments
Election 2024
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 * Who is ahead in Harris vs. Trump 2024 presidential polls right now?
   Earlier today
   
   Who is ahead in Harris vs. Trump 2024 presidential polls right now?
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 * Trump complains about campaign as advisers try to focus on attacking Harris
   August 7, 2024
   
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   August 7, 2024

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