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Maryland Senate president Thomas V Mike Miller, left, and House speaker Michael Busch discuss an FBI briefing.
Maryland Senate president Thomas V Mike Miller, left, and House speaker Michael Busch discuss an FBI briefing. Photograph: Brian Witte/AP
Maryland Senate president Thomas V Mike Miller, left, and House speaker Michael Busch discuss an FBI briefing. Photograph: Brian Witte/AP

Maryland elections company bought by Russian oligarch close to Putin

This article is more than 5 years old

A company that provides key services for Maryland elections has been bought by a parent company with links to a Russian oligarch close to Vladimir Putin, state officials said on Friday after a briefing a day earlier from the FBI.

Maryland officials spoke hours after the US justice department released a grand jury indictment against 12 Russian military intelligence officers for computer hacking offenses during the 2016 US election, which US intelligence agencies agree Moscow sought to influence in favor of Donald Trump.

Senate president Thomas V Mike Miller and House speaker Michael Busch made the announcement at a news conference in the Maryland State House in Annapolis, a gathering that included staff members of Governor Larry Hogan.

Miller said the announcement of the 12 indictments by special counsel Robert Mueller convinced Maryland officials to disclose their own FBI briefing, even if the agents who briefed them were not eager to make the information public.

“They weren’t really anxious for us to come forward but after today we felt we had an obligation to share it with you and share it with our constituents that this has occurred and we want the public to know this as well,” Miller said.

Busch said: “The FBI conveyed to us that there is no criminal activity that they’ve seen. They believe that the system that we have has not been breached.”

In a letter, Hogan, Busch and Miller asked the US Department of Homeland Security for technical assistance to evaluate the network used by the elections board.

In a statement, Maryland’s elections board said it was not the state election office mentioned in the federal indictment. The board also said no Maryland election official has used or is using services provided by the vendor referenced in the indictment.

The vendor used by Maryland, ByteGrid, was purchased by a Russian investor in 2015 without knowledge of Maryland state officials, officials said. In a statement released late on Friday the company said: “ByteGrid’s investors have no involvement or control in company operations.”

It also said: “We stand by our commitment to security in everything we do, and do not share information about who our customers are and what we do for them.”

ByteGrid encouraged people to read the company’s Maryland elections contract, which is a public record. State officials said ByteGrid hosts the statewide voter registration, candidacy and election management system; the online voter registration system; online ballot delivery system; and unofficial election night results website.

In a statement, the state elections board said the FBI told officials that ByteGrid is financed by AltPoint Capital Partners, whose fund manager is a Russian, and its largest investor is a Russian oligarch named Vladimir Potanin. The board said that in response, it has been working with various federal and state officials to ensure that voter data and the state’s election systems are secure.

Busch described the leading investor as being “very close to the Russian prime minister, Vladimir Putin”.

Miller said Maryland officials decided it was “imperative that our constituents know that a Russian oligarch has purchased our election machinery, and we need to be on top of it”.

In a statement, Hogan said: “It is with concern that I learned that information provided to the Maryland State Board of Elections by federal law enforcement this week indicates that a vendor contracted by the Board to provide a number of services, including voter registration infrastructure, had been acquired by a parent company with financial ties to a Russian national.”

Hogan said that while the information relayed by the FBI did not indicate “any wrongdoing or criminal acts have been discovered”, he noted that even the appearance of the potential for “bad actors” to have any influence on the state’s election infrastructure could undermine public trust in the election system.

“That is why it is imperative that the State Board of Elections take immediate and comprehensive action to evaluate the security of our system and take any and all necessary steps to address any vulnerabilities,” Hogan said.

Miller and Busch also said they have asked Maryland attorney general Brian Frosh to review existing contractual obligations of the state, and asked for a review of the system to ensure there have been no breaches.

Busch said there was no indication the company had anything to do with a voter registration error at the state’s Motor Vehicle Administration that created the potential for tens of thousands of voters to require provisional ballots in last month’s primary.

Maryland was one of the states with suspicious online activities before the 2016 election, according to the US Department of Homeland Security.

In August 2016, the state board says “unusual activity” was observed on the state’s online voter registration and ballot request system, and the board immediately responded. The board says it provided log files to the FBI, one of the state’s cybersecurity vendors and another cybersecurity firm, and all three independently reviewed the transactions related to the activity and found nothing suspicious.

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