WEST
PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) — President Donald Trump retweeted a post that
included the alleged name of the anonymous whistleblower whose complaint
ultimately led to Trump’s impeachment by the House.
Just
before midnight Friday, Trump retweeted a message from Twitter user
@Surfermom77, an account that claims to be a woman named Sophia who
lives in California. The account shows some indications of automation,
including an unusually high amount of activity and profile pictures
featuring stock images from the internet.
By
Saturday morning, the post seemed to have disappeared on many users’
feeds, suggesting Trump had deleted it, though it could still be found
in other ways, including on a website that logs every presidential
tweet.
The
retweet then reappeared Saturday night. Twitter told The Associated
Press that an outage with one of its systems caused tweets on some
accounts, including Trump’s, to be visible to some but not others.
Trump
has repeatedly backed efforts to unmask the whistleblower. But his
Friday night retweet marks the first time he has directly sent the
alleged name into the Twitter feed of his 68 million followers.
Unmasking
the whistleblower, who works in the intelligence field, could violate
federal protection laws that have historically been supported by both
parties.
The
whistleblower filed a complaint in August about one of Trump’s telephone
conversations with Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskiy and other
dealings with the Eastern European nation. The complaint prompted House
Democrats to launch a probe that ended with Trump’s impeachment earlier
this month. The matter now heads to the Senate, where the Republican
majority is expected to acquit the president.
The
central points from the whistleblower’s complaint were confirmed during
the House impeachment hearings by a string of diplomats and other
career officials, many of whom testified in public. The White House also
released a transcript of Trump’s July 25 phone call with Zelenskiy, in
which he asks for help investigating former Vice President Joe Biden and
the Democratic National Committee.
Speculation about the whistleblower’s identity has been circulating in conservative media and on social media for months.
U.S.
whistleblower laws exist to protect the identity and careers of people
who bring forward accusations of wrongdoing by government officials. The
Associated Press typically does not reveal the identity of
whistleblowers.
Trump
insists he did nothing wrong in his dealings with Ukraine and has
asserted that the whistleblower made up the complaint, despite its
corroboration by other officials. Trump also argues that he has a right
to face his accuser and has called on the whistleblower to step forward.
For
months, an array of right-wing personalities, amateur pro-Trump
internet sleuths and some conservative news outlets have published what
they claim to be details about the whistleblower, including name and
career history. The president himself has also been inching closer to
outing the individual; earlier this week, Trump shared a tweet linking
to a Washington Examiner article that included the alleged name.
Surfermom77,
the Twitter handle on the post Trump retweeted, describes herself as a
“100%Trump Supporter” and California resident. The account had nearly
79,000 followers as of Saturday afternoon. Some of its previous posts
have denounced Islam and sharply criticized former President Barack
Obama and other Democrats.
Surfermom77
has displayed some hallmarks of a Twitter bot, an automated account. A
recent profile picture on the account, for instance, is a stock photo of
a woman in business attire that is available for use online.
That photo was removed Saturday and replaced with an image of Trump.
A
deeper look at Surfermom77’s account shows the user previously used two
other stock photos as profile pictures, including one of a model
wearing an orange hat used by a hat retailer.
Surfermom77
has also tweeted far more than typical users, more than 170,000 times
since the account was activated in 2013. Surfermom77 has posted, on
average, 72 tweets a day, according to Nir Hauser, chief technology
officer at VineSight, a technology firm that tracks online
misinformation.
“That’s not something most humans are doing,” Hauser said.
While
many bots only repost benign information like cat photos, others have
been used to spread disinformation or polarizing claims, as Russian bots
did in the lead up to the 2016 election.
In
past years, Surfermom77 has described herself as a teacher, historian,
documentary author and model. Attempts to reach the person behind the
account by telephone on Saturday were unsuccessful. An email address
could not be found.
Facebook
has a policy banning posts that name the alleged whistleblower. But
Twitter, which doesn’t have such a rule, has not removed the tweet from
Supermom77 or tweets from others who have named the alleged
whistleblower.
“The
Tweet you referenced is not a violation of the Twitter Rules,” the
company wrote in a statement emailed to The Associated Press.
Some
details about the whistleblower that have been published online by
Trump’s supporters have been inaccurate or misrepresented.
For
example, a photo shared widely on social media last month was
circulated by Facebook, Reddit and Twitter users who wrongly claimed it
showed the whistleblower with Obama’s staffers outside the White House
as Trump moved in.
The
individual in the photo actually was R. David Edelman, a former special
assistant to Obama on economic and tech policy. Edelman debunked the
claim on his Twitter account and told the AP he received threats online
as a result of the false claims.
Michael
German, an FBI whistleblower who left the agency after reporting
allegations of mismanagement in counterterrorism cases, said outing
government whistleblowers not only puts them at personal risk but also
discourages other government officials from stepping forward to expose
possible wrongdoing.
German,
now a fellow at the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University
Law School, said the ease with which the alleged whistleblower’s
identity has been spread online shows the need for greater legal
protections for whistleblowers.
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