
A new filing from special counsel John Durham has raised major national security concerns over access to White House internet traffic.
The filing, which was submitted late on Feb. 11 in connection with the indictment of Michael Sussmann, a former attorney to Hillary Clintonโs 2016 campaign, reveals that Rodney Joffe, a tech executive who was working with Sussmann, had exploited access to domain name system (DNS) internet traffic pertaining to the Executive Office of the President of the United States (EOP) as well as Trump Tower and Donald Trumpโs Central Park West apartment building.
The filing also discloses that Joffe, a private individual who has been implicated in mail order scams in the past, had access to the White Houseโs DNS internet traffic since at least 2014.
Joffe gained this access when his firm, Neustar, was hired by the government to โaccess and maintain dedicated servers for the EOP as part of a sensitive arrangement whereby it provided DNS resolution servicesโ to the Executive Office of the President.
Durham doesnโt state whether Joffeโs access to the Presidentโs Office was abused between 2014 and 2016 when Barack Obama was president. However, Durham alleges that when Trump became president, Joffe โand his associates exploited this arrangement by mining the EOPโs DNS trafficโ in order to gather โderogatory information about Donald Trump.โ
DNS functions as a phone book of the internet. By monitoring DNS internet traffic, Joffe would have had access to information about which websites were being accessed from the White House. But according to Durham, the DNS data was โamong the Internet dataโ mined and exploited by Joffe, suggesting that Joffe had access to additional data about Trumpโs internet activities.
Durhamโs filing states that Joffe tasked a small group of university researchers to mine internet data to establish โan inferenceโ and โnarrativeโ tying Trump to Russia. Durham said that in doing so, Joffe โwas seeking to please certain โVIPs.โโ According to Durham, Joffe identified these VIPs as individuals at Sussmannโs law firm, Perkins Coie, and the Clinton campaign.
While Durhamโs latest filing doesnโt state whether Joffe was directly paid for spying on Trumpโs internet activities, an earlier Durham filing stated that in addition to Joffeโs intent to please โcertain VIPs,โ Joffe claimed toย have been offeredย a high-ranking position in a Clinton administration.
Byย Jeff Carlsonย andย Hans Mahncke