Incendiary texts traced to company run by a top Trump aide - Los Angeles Times
Advertisement

Incendiary texts traced to a firm run by a top Trump campaign aide

A supporter waves a Trump flag Thursday outside the Pennsylvania Convention Center in Philadelphia as votes are counted.
A voter shows his support for Trump on Thursday outside the Pennsylvania Convention Center in Philadelphia as votes are counted. Mass texts falsely claimed the election was being stolen and urged Trump supporters to rally nearby.
(Associated Press)
Share via

A texting company run by one of President Trump’s top campaign officials sent out thousands of targeted, anonymous text messages urging supporters to rally where votes were being counted in Philadelphia on Thursday, falsely claiming Democrats were trying to steal the presidential election.

The messages directed Trump fans to converge at a downtown intersection where hundreds of protesters from the opposing candidates’ camps faced off Thursday afternoon. Pennsylvania is a crucial battleground state where former Vice President Joe Biden’s supporters believe the outstanding ballots will put him over the top in the presidential election.

“This kind of message is playing with fire, and we are very lucky that it does not seem to have driven more conflict,” said John Scott-Railton, senior researcher at the University of Toronto’s online watchdog Citizen Lab. Scott-Railton helped track down the source.

Advertisement

The texts were sent using phone numbers leased to the text-messaging platform Opn Sesame, said two people familiar with the matter who spoke on condition they not be further identified. The company’s chief executive is Gary Coby, the Trump campaign’s digital director. Opn Sesame provides text-messaging services to GOP clients including the Republican National Committee.

“ALERT: Radical Liberals & Dems are trying to steal this election from Trump! We need YOU!” the text said, directing recipients to “show your support” on a street corner near the Pennsylvania Convention Center, where votes were being counted and tensions were running high.

A top Trump campaign official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the message did not come from the campaign. Because Opn Sesame is used by multiple customers, none of whom the company would identify, it could not be determined exactly who sent the message. Coby declined to comment.

Advertisement

Opn Sesame’s connection to the messages was first reported by the Washington Post.

Among those who received the rallying text was Chris Bray, who lives in rural Bucks County, about 25 miles outside Philadelphia.

A registered independent who said he voted for Biden, Bray said he was very surprised to see the message pop up on his phone since he never signed up for anything related to the Trump campaign.

“I actually texted a number of other friends to say, ‘Hey, have you guys been getting robo-texts like this?’” Bray said Friday. “It was a call to action. It borders on that the rhetoric that we’ve been hearing for months now, and that’s really dangerous; if you get the right people together with a slight screw loose, we just don’t know what can happen.”

Advertisement

Later Thursday night, two men were arrested near the convention center for carrying loaded handguns without a permit, Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw said. Dist. Atty. Larry Krasner said there were no indications they were part of an extremist group. Their vehicle bore a window sticker for the right-wing conspiracy theory QAnon and an AR-style rifle and ammunition inside, Outlaw said.

The text messages were sent using 13 different phone numbers identified by RoboKiller, a mobile phone app that lets users block text and voice spam, said company Vice President Giulia Porter. RoboKiller traced the numbers to Twilio, a gateway for bulk-messaging services.

After being notified, Twilio shut down the numbers, saying in a statement that the texts “were sent without consumer opt-out language, which is in direct contravention of our policies.” A company spokesman declined further comment.

About 80 million political text messages have been sent daily since September in the U.S. — many of those from the Trump camp echoing his baseless claims that Democrats were trying to steal the election, said RoboKiller’s Porter. They are highly targeted.

A Stop the Steal Facebook group grew to hundreds of thousands of members before Facebook shut it down Thursday.

Nov. 5, 2020

Political text-messaging can exploit the same flaws in telecommunications infrastructure that lets robocallers hide their origin. They can spoof the numbers they call from and auto-blast thousands of texts with a single mouse click.

Opn Sesame has earned millions as a hub of text-messaging efforts for the Trump campaign and the RNC this election cycle, said a Republican digital strategist, who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of political retribution.

Advertisement

Facebook and Twitter cracked down on disinformation ahead of the election, which made texts and robocalls more attractive to those seeking to spread false and sometimes dangerous messages directly to voters via their phones.

“The extent to which these companies are relying upon loopholes in the law and a lack of regulation in this space has really staggered me,” said Sam Woolley, a misinformation and computational propaganda researcher at the University of Texas at Austin.

“They really want to circumvent the need to rely on social media firms, which is why they are using these private mechanisms,” he added. “They are using tech that we don’t think of as particularly new — texting, calling — but using them in ways that are very Machiavellian.”

Advertisement