Roger Stone, a former campaign adviser for President Donald Trump, exchanged messages with a Twitter persona in August 2016 linked to the hack of the Democratic National Committee (DNC).
Roger Stone told the Washington Times that he had “completely innocuous” conversations with a Romanian hacker known as “Guccifer 2.0.” Of the interactions, Stone said, “It was so perfunctory, brief and banal I had forgotten it.”
The hacker said that he got into the DNC files and delivered them to WikiLeaks, prompting Stone to write about the admission for Breitbart News.
Guccifer 2.0 appeared last summer shortly after it was revealed that the DNC’s computer network had been breached by hackers. The self-described Romanian hacktivist claimed in a June 15 blog post that he had compromised the DNC — not Russian hackers, as experts had indicated — and said he had supplied WikiLeaks with a trove of documents ultimately published by the antisecrecy website the following month.
Stone wrote an article pointing to Guccifer 2.0 in order to exonerate the Russian government from the accusation by experts that they had hacked the DNC.
The hacker contacted Stone, calling him a “great man,” for writing about him, and offered, “please tell me if i can help u anyhow. it would be a great pleasure to me.”
Critics of Trump have taken this interaction to be proof that the Trump administration was somehow colluding to hack the DNC and use the information spread by WikiLeaks to damage Democrats in the election. Even Hillary Clinton herself admitted that she believed Russians influenced the election to tilt towards Trump.
DT advisor Roger Stone in direct contact with Russian hacker Guccifer 2.0. The smoke is starting to become fire. #TrumpRussia
— Rob Reiner (@robreiner) March 9, 2017
In coming days, expect to hear about communications between Roger Stone (Trump advisor) and Guccifer 2.0 (Russian hackers who hit the DNC).
— George Takei (@GeorgeTakei) March 9, 2017
https://twitter.com/justinhendrix/status/840352398409375745?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
But Stone waves off these accusations, saying that the timeline of events doesn’t support the speculation of collusion with the Trump campaign.
“Even if [Guccifer 2.0] is/was a Russian asset, my brief Aug. 14 correspondence with him on twitter comes AFTER I wrote about his role in the DNC hacks (Aug 5) and AFTER Wikileaks released the DNC material,” Mr. Stone clarified on Friday. “How does one collaborate on a matter after the fact?”
Guccifer 2.0 is now believed to be a persona used by Russian state actors to spread the information hacked from the DNC, according to U.S. intelligence authorities.
The Trump administration has been accused by critics and Democrats of having unsavory and possibly criminal interactions with the Russian government before the election, and this will only fuel the speculation. Trump has denied all allegations and blamed the media for a “witch hunt” over these matters, despite his national security advisor Mike Flynn being forced to resign for lying about just such interactions with a Russian ambassador.