“Authorities
in Florida and Alaska on Tuesday were
investigating threatening emails sent to Democratic voters that claimed to be
from the Proud Boys, a far-right group supportive of President Trump, but
appeared instead to be a deceptive campaign making use of a vulnerability in
the organization’s online network. The emails, which appeared to target
Democrats using data from digital databases known as ‘voter files,’ told
recipients the group was ‘in possession of all your information’ and instructed
voters to change their party registration and cast their ballots for Trump.
“‘You
will vote for Trump on Election Day or we will come after you,’ warned the
emails, which by Tuesday night
were said to have reached voters in four states, three of them hotly contested
swing states in the coming presidential election. The
emails were reported in Pennsylvania, Arizona, Florida and Alaska. Only Alaska
is not a major focus of the presidential campaign, but it does have a closely watched race for the U.S. Senate.
“Enrique
Tarrio, the chairman of the Proud Boys and the Florida state director of
Latinos for Trump, denied involvement, saying the group operates two sites, and
was increasingly migrating away from the domain used in the email campaign… The
technical data embedded in the emails do not make clear who was behind the
barrage arriving in the inboxes of unsuspecting voters.
Democrats
in Alachua County, in north-central Florida, reported receiving the messages,
according to interviews with several recipients. So, too, did voters in Alaska,
said Casey Steinau, chair of the Alaska Democratic Party. Her communications
director, Jeanne Devon, said Tuesday night
the FBI ‘is now involved in the investigation.’ A spokeswoman for the bureau’s
Anchorage field office did not respond to a request for comment.
“Kristen
Clarke, president and executive director of the national Lawyers’ Committee for
Civil Rights Under Law, said her organization had received at least one report
of a similar email from a voter in Arizona. A spokeswoman for the Arizona
secretary of state’s office did not immediately respond to a request for
comment. ‘This is absolutely something to be concerned about,’ said John
Scott-Railton, a senior researcher at the Citizen Lab at
the University of Toronto’s Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy. ‘This
is what election interference looks like.’ He said he knew of a threatening
email reaching a voter in Pennsylvania.
“Federal
authorities, elections officials and experts in disinformation have issued dire
warnings not just about voter intimidation but also about deceptive online
campaigns playing up fears of intimidation tactics… Some cybersecurity experts
were already pointing to the possibility of foreign involvement…
“The
domain, officialproudboys.com,
was recently dropped by a hosting company that uses Google Cloud services,
according to Google Cloud spokesman Ted Ladd. The hosting service cancelled the
registration after Google Cloud notified the customer that a non-profit group
had raised concerns about the Proud Boys, Ladd said. Following the action from
the hosting service, the domain appears to have been left unsecured, allowing
anyone on the Internet to take control of it and use it to send out the
menacing messages, said Trevor Davis, CEO of Counteraction, a Washington-based
digital intelligence firm.
“The
lapse, which began on Oct. 8, ‘likely made them vulnerable to this kind of
hijacking,’ Davis said. ‘Bad actors are constantly scanning the Internet for
opportunities. Given the public profile of the Proud Boys and the likelihood
that whoever’s sending these emails has access to a voter file, this appears to
be opportunism.’
“The
Proud Boys rose to national prominence last month during the first presidential
debate between Trump and his Democratic rival, Joe Biden, when the president
passed up an invitation by moderator Chris Wallace, of Fox News, to denounce
white supremacists. When Biden suggested that Trump denounce the Proud Boys, he
said, ‘stand back and stand by’ — a comment that was widely celebrated on social media by
the group as a call to action…
“The
group’s leaders say they do not support white supremacy, but they had a
contingent at 2017’s notorious Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Va.
The Proud Boys also have been frequent participants in the reopen protests demonstrating against coronavirus
lockdowns and, more recently, the protests in Portland,
Ore. Facebook has banned the group as a hate group, and the Southern Poverty
Law Center classifies them as a hate group and says its leaders ‘regularly
spout white nationalist memes and maintain affiliations with known extremists.’…”
(The Washington Post).
In related news:
ReplyDelete"A French high school teacher who had shown caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad to his class was beheaded on Oct. 16 by an 18-year-old Muslim refugee in what France’s President Emmanuel Macron characterized as an 'Islamist terrorist attack.'
"The killing is the latest high-profile attack by a Muslim extremist in France, coming after the 2015 massacre at Charlie Hebdo magazine and the 2016 truck attack in Nice. It also occurred two weeks after Macron gave a controversial speech defining Islam as 'a religion that is in crisis today all over the world.'..." (The Conversation).
As a member of the Brevard County (Florida) Democratic Executive Committee, I personally have not received any threatening emails, however several of us have received threatening emails.
ReplyDeleteThe pro-Trump anti-mask groups have also motorcaded near early voting locations yelling threats against liberals, gays, communists, socialists, and illegals. They backfire trucks. No arrests have been made.