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Showing Original Post only (View all)The Bernie Sanders Campaign Faced A Fake News Tsunami. Where Did It Come From? [View all]
WASHINGTON ― Last June, John Mattes started noticing something coursing like a virus through the Facebook page he helped administer for Bernie Sanders fans in San Diego. People with no apparent ties to California were friending the page and sharing links from unfamiliar sites full of anti-Hillary Clinton propaganda.
The stories they posted werent the normal complaints he was used to seeing as the Vermont senator and the former secretary of state fought out the Democratic presidential primary. These stories alleged that Clinton had murdered her political opponents and used body doubles.
Mattes, 66, had been a television reporter and Senate investigator in previous lives. He put his expertise in unmasking fraudsters to work. At first, he suspected that the sites were created by the old Clinton haters from the 90s ― what Hillary Clinton had dubbed the vast right-wing conspiracy.
But when Mattes started tracking down the sites domain registrations, the trail led to Macedonia and Albania. In mid-September, he emailed a few of his private investigator friends with a list of the sites. Very creepy and i do not think Koch brothers, he wrote.
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By late October, Mattes said hed traced 40 percent of the domain registrations for the fake news sites he saw popping up on pro-Sanders pages back to Eastern Europe. Others appeared to be based in Panama and the U.S., or were untraceable. He wondered, Am I the only person that sees all this crap floating through these Bernie pages?
He wasnt. Bernie supporters across the country had been noticing dubious websites and posters linked back to Eastern Europe long before Mattes did ― and even before The Washington Post reported in mid-June that Russian government hackers had stolen emails from the Democratic National Committee. They had been warning each other that something weird was going on, posting troll alerts and compiling lists of fake news sites.
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In San Diego, Mattes was intrigued by a Facebook user named Oliver Mitov whom he saw constantly posting anti-Clinton propaganda.
Mattes first noticed Mitov posting in his Facebook group in September. But when he searched the pages archives, he found that Mitov had been in the group since late July. He soon realized there wasnt just one Mitov but four. Three had Sanders as their profile picture. Two had the same single Facebook friend, while a third had no Facebook friends. The fourth appeared to be a middle-aged man with 19 Facebook friends, including that one friend the other Mitovs had in common.
All combined, the four Mitovs had joined more than two dozen pro-Sanders groups around the U.S., including Latinos for Bernie Sanders, Oregon for Bernie Sanders 2016 and Pennsylvania Progressives for Bernie Sanders. Together, those groups had hundreds of thousands of members.
The Mitov posts would have been explosive if theyd been true. In one Aug. 4 post to Mattes page, Mitov wrote, This is a story you wont see on Fox/CNN or the other Mainstream media! He then linked to a post claiming falsely that Clinton had made a small fortune by arming ISIS. On Sept. 25, he posted on several pro-Sanders pages a link promising game-changing information: NEW LEAK: Here is Who Ordered Hillary To Leave The 4 Men In Benghazi! The link went to a fake news site called usapoliticsnow.com.
The aim of Mitovs activity seemed pretty obvious to Mattes: to depress the number of Sanders supporters who voted for Clinton in November.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/bernie-sanders-fake-news-russia_us_58c34d97e4b0ed71826cdb36?63g&