How to Hack an Election - Andrés Sepúlveda rigged elections throughout Latin America for almost a decade. He tells his story for the first time.
How to Hack an Election
Andrés Sepúlveda rigged elections throughout Latin
America for almost a decade. He tells his story for the first time.
By Jordan Robertson, Michael Riley, and Andrew Willis |
March 31, 2016
It was just before midnight when Enrique Peña Nieto
declared victory as the newly elected president of Mexico. Peña Nieto was a
lawyer and a millionaire, from a family of mayors and governors. His wife was a
telenovela star. He beamed as he was showered with red, green, and white
confetti at the Mexico City headquarters of the Institutional Revolutionary
Party, or PRI, which had ruled for more than 70 years before being forced out
in 2000. Returning the party to power on that night in July 2012, Peña Nieto
vowed to tame drug violence, fight corruption, and open a more transparent era
in Mexican politics.
Two thousand miles away, in an apartment in Bogotá’s
upscale Chicó Navarra neighborhood, Andrés Sepúlveda sat before six computer
screens. Sepúlveda is Colombian, bricklike, with a shaved head, goatee, and a
tattoo of a QR code containing an encryption key on the back of his head. On
his nape are the words “
” and “” stacked atop each
other, dark riffs on coding. He was watching a live feed of Peña Nieto’s
victory party, waiting for an official declaration of the results.
When Peña Nieto won, Sepúlveda began destroying evidence.
He drilled holes in flash drives, hard drives, and cell phones, fried their
circuits in a microwave, then broke them to shards with a hammer. He shredded
documents and flushed them down the toilet and erased servers in Russia and
Ukraine rented anonymously with Bitcoins. He was dismantling what he says was a
secret history of one of the dirtiest Latin American campaigns in recent
memory.
For eight years, Sepúlveda, now 31, says he traveled the
continent rigging major political campaigns. With a budget of $600,000, the
Peña Nieto job was by far his most complex. He led a team of hackers that stole
campaign strategies, manipulated social media to create false waves of
enthusiasm and derision, and installed spyware in opposition offices, all to
help Peña Nieto, a right-of-center candidate, eke out a victory. On that July
night, he cracked bottle after bottle of Colón Negra beer in celebration. As
usual on election night, he was alone.
Sepúlveda’s career began in 2005, and his first jobs were
small—mostly defacing campaign websites and breaking into opponents’ donor
databases. Within a few years he was assembling teams that spied, stole, and
smeared on behalf of presidential campaigns across Latin America. He wasn’t
cheap, but his services were extensive. For $12,000 a month, a customer hired a
crew that could hack smartphones, spoof and clone Web pages, and send mass
e-mails and texts. The premium package, at $20,000 a month, also included a
full range of digital interception, attack, decryption, and defense. The jobs
were carefully laundered through layers of middlemen and consultants. Sepúlveda
says many of the candidates he helped might not even have known about his role;
he says he met only a few.
His teams worked on presidential elections in Nicaragua,
Panama, Honduras, El Salvador, Colombia, Mexico, Costa Rica, Guatemala, and
Venezuela. Campaigns mentioned in this story were contacted through former and
current spokespeople; none but Mexico’s PRI and the campaign of Guatemala’s
National Advancement Party would comment.
As a child, he witnessed the violence of Colombia’s
Marxist guerrillas. As an adult, he allied with a right wing emerging across
Latin America. He believed his hacking was no more diabolical than the tactics
of those he opposed, such as Hugo Chávez and Daniel Ortega.
Many of Sepúlveda’s efforts were unsuccessful, but he has
enough wins that he might be able to claim as much influence over the political
direction of modern Latin America as anyone in the 21st century. “My job was to
do actions of dirty war and psychological operations, black propaganda,
rumors—the whole dark side of politics that nobody knows exists but everyone
can see,” he says in Spanish, while sitting at a small plastic table in an
outdoor courtyard deep within the heavily fortified offices of Colombia’s
attorney general’s office. He’s serving 10 years in prison for charges
including use of malicious software, conspiracy to commit crime, violation of
personal data, and espionage, related to hacking during Colombia’s 2014
presidential election. He has agreed to tell his full story for the first time,
hoping to convince the public that he’s rehabilitated—and gather support for a
reduced sentence.
Usually, he says, he was on the payroll of Juan José
Rendón, a Miami-based political consultant who’s been called the Karl Rove of
Latin America. Rendón denies using Sepúlveda for anything illegal, and categorically
disputes the account Sepúlveda gave Bloomberg Businessweek of their
relationship, but admits knowing him and using him to do website design. “If I
talked to him maybe once or twice, it was in a group session about that, about
the Web,” he says. “I don’t do illegal stuff at all. There is negative
campaigning. They don’t like it—OK. But if it’s legal, I’m gonna do it. I’m not
a saint, but I’m not a criminal.” While Sepúlveda’s policy was to destroy all
data at the completion of a job, he left some documents with members of his
hacking teams and other trusted third parties as a secret “insurance policy.”
Sepúlveda provided Bloomberg Businessweek with what he
says are e-mails showing conversations between him, Rendón, and Rendón’s
consulting firm concerning hacking and the progress of campaign-related cyber
attacks. Rendón says the e-mails are fake. An analysis by an independent
computer security firm said a sample of the e-mails they examined appeared
authentic. Some of Sepúlveda’s descriptions of his actions match published
accounts of events during various election campaigns, but other details
couldn’t be independently verified. One person working on the campaign in
Mexico, who asked not to be identified out of fear for his safety,
substantially confirmed Sepúlveda’s accounts of his and Rendón’s roles in that
election.
Sepúlveda says he was offered several political jobs in
Spain, which he says he turned down because he was too busy. On the question of
whether the U.S. presidential campaign is being tampered with, he is
unequivocal. “I’m 100 percent sure it is,” he says.
Sepúlveda grew up poor in Bucaramanga, eight hours north
of Bogotá by car. His mother was a secretary. His father was an activist,
helping farmers find better crops to grow than coca plants, and the family
moved constantly because of death threats from drug traffickers. His parents
divorced, and by the age of 15, after failing school, he went to live with his
father in Bogotá and used a computer for the first time. He later enrolled in a
local technology school and, through a friend there, learned to code.
In 2005, Sepúlveda’s older brother, a publicist, was
helping with the congressional campaigns of a party aligned with then-Colombian
President Alvaro Uribe. Uribe was a hero of the brothers, a U.S. ally who
strengthened the military to fight the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia
(FARC). During a visit to party headquarters, Sepúlveda took out his laptop and
began scanning the office’s wireless network. He easily tapped into the computer
of Rendón, the party’s strategist, and downloaded Uribe’s work schedule and
upcoming speeches. Sepúlveda says Rendón was furious—then hired him on the
spot. Rendón says this never happened.
For decades, Latin American elections were rigged, not won,
and the methods were pretty straightforward. Local fixers would hand out
everything from small appliances to cash in exchange for votes. But in the
1990s, electoral reforms swept the region. Voters were issued tamper-proof ID
cards, and nonpartisan institutes ran the elections in several countries. The
modern campaign, at least a version North Americans might recognize, had
arrived in Latin America.
Rendón had already begun a successful career based
partly, according to his critics—and more than one lawsuit—on a mastery of
dirty tricks and rumormongering. (In 2014, El Salvador’s then-President Carlos
Mauricio Funes accused Rendón of orchestrating dirty war campaigns throughout
Latin America. Rendón sued in Florida for defamation, but the court dismissed
the case on the grounds that Funes couldn’t be sued for his official acts.) The
son of democracy activists, he studied psychology and worked in advertising
before advising presidential candidates in his native Venezuela. After accusing
then-President Chávez of vote rigging in 2004, he left and never went back.
Sepúlveda’s first hacking job, he says, was breaking into
an Uribe rival’s website, stealing a database of e-mail addresses, and spamming
the accounts with disinformation. He was paid $15,000 in cash for a month’s
work, five times as much as he made in his previous job designing websites.
Sepúlveda was dazzled by Rendón, who owned a fleet of
luxury cars, wore big flashy watches, and spent thousands on tailored coats.
Like Sepúlveda, he was a perfectionist. His staff was expected to arrive early
and work late. “I was very young,” Sepúlveda says. “I did what I liked, I was
paid well and traveled. It was the perfect job.” But more than anything, their
right-wing politics aligned. Sepúlveda says he saw Rendón as a genius and a
mentor. A devout Buddhist and practitioner of martial arts, according to his
own website, Rendón cultivated an image of mystery and menace, wearing only
all-black in public, including the occasional samurai robe. On his website he
calls himself the political consultant who is the “best paid, feared the most,
attacked the most, and also the most demanded and most efficient.” Sepúlveda
would have a hand in that.
Rendón, says Sepúlveda, saw that hackers could be
completely integrated into a modern political operation, running attack ads,
researching the opposition, and finding ways to suppress a foe’s turnout. As
for Sepúlveda, his insight was to understand that voters trusted what they
thought were spontaneous expressions of real people on social media more than
they did experts on television and in newspapers. He knew that accounts could
be faked and social media trends fabricated, all relatively cheaply. He wrote a
software program, now called Social Media Predator, to manage and direct a
virtual army of fake Twitter accounts. The software let him quickly change
names, profile pictures, and biographies to fit any need. Eventually, he
discovered, he could manipulate the public debate as easily as moving pieces on
a chessboard—or, as he puts it, “When I realized that people believe what the
Internet says more than reality, I discovered that I had the power to make
people believe almost anything.”
According to Sepúlveda, his payments were made in cash,
half upfront. When he traveled, he used a fake passport and stayed alone in a
hotel, far from campaign staff. No one could bring a smartphone or camera into
his room.
Most jobs were initiated in person. Sepúlveda says Rendón
would give him a piece of paper with target names, e-mail addresses, and phone
numbers. Sepúlveda would take the note to his hotel, enter the data into an
encrypted file, then burn the page or flush it down the toilet. If Rendón
needed to send an e-mail, he used coded language. To “caress” meant to attack;
to “listen to music” meant to intercept a target’s phone calls.
Rendón and Sepúlveda took pains not to be seen together.
They communicated over encrypted phones, which they replaced every two months.
Sepúlveda says he sent daily progress reports and intelligence briefings from
throwaway e-mail accounts to a go-between in Rendón’s consulting firm.
Each job ended with a specific, color-coded destruct
sequence. On election day, Sepúlveda would purge all data classified as “red.”
Those were files that could send him and his handlers to prison: intercepted
phone calls and e-mails, lists of hacking victims, and confidential briefings
he prepared for the campaigns. All phones, hard drives, flash drives, and
computer servers were physically destroyed. Less-sensitive “yellow” data—travel
schedules, salary spreadsheets, fundraising plans—were saved to an encrypted
thumb drive and given to the campaigns for one final review. A week later it,
too, would be destroyed.
For most jobs, Sepúlveda assembled a crew and operated
out of rental homes and apartments in Bogotá. He had a rotating group of 7 to
15 hackers brought in from across Latin America, drawing on the various
regions’ specialties. Brazilians, in his view, develop the best malware.
Venezuelans and Ecuadoreans are superb at scanning systems and software for
vulnerabilities. Argentines are mobile intercept artists. Mexicans are masterly
hackers in general but talk too much. Sepúlveda used them only in emergencies.
The assignments lasted anywhere from a few days to
several months. In Honduras, Sepúlveda defended the communications and computer
systems of presidential candidate Porfirio Lobo Sosa from hackers employed by
his competitors. In Guatemala, he digitally eavesdropped on six political and
business figures, and says he delivered the data to Rendón on encrypted flash
drives at dead drops. (Sepúlveda says it was a small job for a client of
Rendón’s who has ties to the right-wing National Advancement Party, or PAN. The
PAN says it never hired Rendón and has no knowledge of any of his claimed
activities.) In Nicaragua in 2011, Sepúlveda attacked Ortega, who was running
for his third presidential term. In one of the rare jobs in which he was
working for a client other than Rendón, he broke into the e-mail account of
Rosario Murillo, Ortega’s wife and the government’s chief spokeswoman, and
stole a trove of personal and government secrets.
In Venezuela in 2012, the team abandoned its usual
caution, animated by disgust with Chávez. With Chávez running for his fourth
term, Sepúlveda posted an anonymized YouTube clip of himself rifling through
the e-mail of one of the most powerful people in Venezuela, Diosdado Cabello,
then president of the National Assembly. He also went outside his tight circle
of trusted hackers and rallied Anonymous, the hacktivist group, to attack
Chávez’s website.
Dirty Work
Colombia
Supported reelection of Alvaro Uribe for president, 2006;
congressional elections, 2006; failed campaign of Oscar Iván Zuluaga for
president, 2014
Alvaro Uribe
Honduras
Supported Porfirio Lobo Sosa, elected president 2009
Porfirio Lobo Sosa
Nicaragua
Against Daniel Ortega, 2011
Mexico
Supported Enrique Peña Nieto, over a three-year period
Enrique Peña Nieto
Venezuela
Against Chávez and Maduro in 2012 and 2013
Costa Rica
Supported Johnny Araya, failed presidential candidate for
center-left National Liberation Party, 2014 election
Panama
Supported Juan Carlos Navarro, presidental candidate for
the center-left Democratic Revolutionary Party, 2014 election
Juan Carlos Navarro
After Sepúlveda hacked Cabello’s Twitter account, Rendón
seemed to congratulate him. “Eres noticia :)”—you’re news—he wrote in a Sept.
9, 2012, e-mail, linking to a story about the breach. (Rendón says he never
sent such an e-mail.) Sepúlveda provided screen shots of a dozen e-mails, and
many of the original e-mails, showing that from November 2011 to September 2012
Sepúlveda sent long lists of government websites he hacked for various
campaigns to a senior member of Rendón’s consulting firm, lacing them with
hacker slang (“Owned!” read one). Two weeks before Venezuela’s presidential
election, Sepúlveda sent screen shots showing how he’d hacked Chávez’s website
and could turn it on and off at will.
Chávez won but died five months later of cancer,
triggering an emergency election, won by Nicolás Maduro. The day before Maduro
claimed victory, Sepúlveda hacked his Twitter account and posted allegations of
election fraud. Blaming “conspiracy hackings from abroad,” the government of
Venezuela disabled the Internet across the entire country for 20 minutes.
In Mexico, Sepúlveda’s technical mastery and Rendón’s
grand vision for a ruthless political machine fully came together, fueled by
the huge resources of the PRI. The years under President Felipe Calderón and
the National Action Party (also, as in Partido Acción Nacional, PAN) were
plagued by a grinding war against the drug cartels, which made kidnappings,
street assassinations, and beheadings ordinary. As 2012 approached, the PRI
offered the youthful energy of Peña Nieto, who’d just finished a successful term
as governor.
Sepúlveda didn’t like the idea of working in Mexico, a
dangerous country for involvement in public life. But Rendón persuaded him to
travel there for short trips, starting in 2008, often flying him in on his
private jet. Working at one point in Tabasco, on the sweltering Gulf of Mexico,
Sepúlveda hacked a political boss who turned out to have connections to a drug
cartel. After Rendón’s security team learned of a plan to kill Sepúlveda, he
spent a night in an armored Chevy Suburban before returning to Mexico City.
Mexico is effectively a three-party system, and Peña
Nieto faced opponents from both right and left. On the right, the ruling PAN
nominated Josefina Vázquez Mota, its first female presidential candidate. On
the left, the Democratic Revolution Party, or PRD, chose Andrés Manuel López
Obrador, a former Mexico City mayor.
Early polls showed Peña Nieto 20 points ahead, but his
supporters weren’t taking chances. Sepúlveda’s team installed malware in
routers in the headquarters of the PRD candidate, which let him tap the phones
and computers of anyone using the network, including the candidate. He took
similar steps against PAN’s Vázquez Mota. When the candidates’ teams prepared
policy speeches, Sepúlveda had the details as soon as a speechwriter’s fingers
hit the keyboard. Sepúlveda saw the opponents’ upcoming meetings and campaign
schedules before their own teams did.
Money was no problem. At one point, Sepúlveda spent
$50,000 on high-end Russian software that made quick work of tapping Apple,
BlackBerry, and Android phones. He also splurged on the very best fake Twitter
profiles; they’d been maintained for at least a year, giving them a patina of
believability.
Sepúlveda managed thousands of such fake profiles and
used the accounts to shape discussion around topics such as Peña Nieto’s plan
to end drug violence, priming the social media pump with views that real users
would mimic. For less nuanced work, he had a larger army of 30,000 Twitter
bots, automatic posters that could create trends. One conversation he started
stoked fear that the more López Obrador rose in the polls, the lower the peso
would sink. Sepúlveda knew the currency issue was a major vulnerability; he’d
read it in the candidate’s own internal staff memos.
Just about anything the digital dark arts could offer to
Peña Nieto’s campaign or important local allies, Sepúlveda and his team
provided. On election night, he had computers call tens of thousands of voters
with prerecorded phone messages at 3 a.m. in the critical swing state of Jalisco.
The calls appeared to come from the campaign of popular left-wing gubernatorial
candidate Enrique Alfaro Ramírez. That angered voters—that was the point—and
Alfaro lost by a slim margin. In another governor’s race, in Tabasco, Sepúlveda
set up fake Facebook accounts of gay men claiming to back a conservative
Catholic candidate representing the PAN, a stunt designed to alienate his base.
“I always suspected something was off,” the candidate, Gerardo Priego, said
recently when told how Sepúlveda’s team manipulated social media in the
campaign.
In May, Peña Nieto visited Mexico City’s Ibero-American
University and was bombarded by angry chants and boos from students. The
rattled candidate retreated with his bodyguards into an adjacent building,
hiding, according to some social media posts, in a bathroom. The images were a
disaster. López Obrador soared.
The PRI was able to recover after one of López Obrador’s
consultants was caught on tape asking businessmen for $6 million to fund his
candidate’s broke campaign, in possible violation of Mexican laws. Although the
hacker says he doesn’t know the origin of that particular recording, Sepúlveda
and his team had been intercepting the communications of the consultant, Luis
Costa Bonino, for months. (On Feb. 2, 2012, Rendón appears to have sent him
three e-mail addresses and a cell phone number belonging to Costa Bonino in an
e-mail called “Job.”) Sepúlveda’s team disabled the consultant’s personal
website and directed journalists to a clone site. There they posted what looked
like a long defense written by Costa Bonino, which casually raised questions
about whether his Uruguayan roots violated Mexican restrictions on foreigners
in elections. Costa Bonino left the campaign a few days later. He indicated
recently that he knew he was being spied on, he just didn’t know how. It goes
with the trade in Latin America: “Having a phone hacked by the opposition is
not a novelty. When I work on a campaign, the assumption is that everything I
talk about on the phone will be heard by the opponents.”
The press office for Peña Nieto declined to comment. A
spokesman for the PRI said the party has no knowledge of Rendón working for
Peña Nieto’s or any other PRI campaign. Rendón says he has worked on behalf of
PRI candidates in Mexico for 16 years, from August 2000 until today.
In 2012, Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos, Uribe’s
successor, unexpectedly restarted peace talks with the FARC, hoping to end a
50-year war. Furious, Uribe, whose father was killed by FARC guerrillas,
created a party and backed an alternative candidate, Oscar Iván Zuluaga, who
opposed the talks.
Rendón, who was working for Santos, wanted Sepúlveda to
join his team, but Sepúlveda turned him down. He considered Rendón’s
willingness to work for a candidate supporting peace with the FARC a betrayal
and suspected the consultant was going soft, choosing money over principles.
Sepúlveda says he was motivated by ideology first and money second, and that if
he wanted to get rich he could have made a lot more hacking financial systems
than elections. For the first time, he decided to oppose his mentor.
Sepúlveda went to work for the opposition, reporting
directly to Zuluaga’s campaign manager, Luis Alfonso Hoyos. (Zuluaga denies any
knowledge of hacking; Hoyos couldn’t be reached for comment.) Together,
Sepúlveda says, they came up with a plan to discredit the president by showing
that the guerrillas continued to traffic in drugs and violence even as they
talked about peace. Within months, Sepúlveda hacked the phones and e-mail
accounts of more than 100 militants, including the FARC’s leader, Rodrigo
Londoño, also known as Timochenko. After assembling a thick file on the FARC,
including evidence of the group’s suppression of peasant votes in the
countryside, Sepúlveda agreed to accompany Hoyos to the offices of a Bogotá TV
news program and present the evidence.
It may not have been wise to work so doggedly and
publicly against a party in power. A month later, Sepúlveda was smoking on the
terrace of his Bogotá office when he saw a caravan of police vehicles pull up.
Forty black-clad commandos raided the office to arrest him. Sepúlveda blamed
his carelessness at the TV station for the arrest. He believes someone there
turned him in. In court, he wore a bulletproof vest and sat surrounded by
guards with bomb shields. In the back of the courtroom, men held up pictures of
his family, making a slashing gesture across their throats or holding a hand
over their mouths—stay silent or else. Abandoned by former allies, he
eventually pleaded guilty to espionage, hacking, and other crimes in exchange
for a 10-year sentence.
Three days after arriving at Bogotá’s La Picota prison,
he went to the dentist and was ambushed by men with knives and razors, but was
saved by guards. A week later, guards woke him and rushed him from his cell,
saying they had heard about a plot to shoot him with a silenced pistol as he
slept. After national police intercepted phone calls revealing yet another
plot, he’s now in solitary confinement at a maximum-security facility in a
rundown area of central Bogotá. He sleeps with a bulletproof blanket and vest
at his bedside, behind bombproof doors. Guards check on him every hour. As part
of his plea deal, he says, he’s turned government witness, helping
investigators assess possible cases against the former candidate, Zuluaga, and
his strategist, Hoyos. Authorities issued an indictment for the arrest of
Hoyos, but according to Colombian press reports he’s fled to Miami.
When Sepúlveda leaves for meetings with prosecutors at
the Bunker, the attorney general’s Bogotá headquarters, he travels in an armed
caravan including six motorcycles speeding through the capital at 60 mph,
jamming cell phone signals as they go to block tracking of his movements or
detonation of roadside bombs.
In July 2015, Sepúlveda sat in the small courtyard of the
Bunker, poured himself a cup of coffee from a thermos, and took out a pack of
Marlboro cigarettes. He says he wants to tell his story because the public
doesn’t grasp the power hackers exert over modern elections or the specialized
skills needed to stop them. “I worked with presidents, public figures with
great power, and did many things with absolutely no regrets because I did it
with full conviction and under a clear objective, to end dictatorship and
socialist governments in Latin America,” he says. “I have always said that there
are two types of politics—what people see and what really makes things happen.
I worked in politics that are not seen.”
Sepúlveda says he’s allowed a computer and a monitored
Internet connection as part of an agreement to help the attorney general’s
office track and disrupt drug cartels using a version of his Social Media
Predator software. The government will not confirm or deny that he has access
to a computer, or what he’s using it for. He says he has modified Social Media
Predator to counteract the kind of sabotage he used to specialize in, including
jamming candidates’ Facebook walls and Twitter feeds. He’s used it to scan
700,000 tweets from pro-Islamic State accounts to learn what makes a good
terror recruiter. Sepúlveda says the program has been able to identify ISIS
recruiters minutes after they create Twitter accounts and start posting, and he
hopes to share the information with the U.S. or other countries fighting the
Islamist group. Samples of Sepúlveda’s code evaluated by an independent company
found it authentic and substantially original.
Sepúlveda’s contention that operations like his happen on
every continent is plausible, says David Maynor, who runs a security testing
company in Atlanta called Errata Security. Maynor says he occasionally gets
inquiries for campaign-related jobs. His company has been asked to obtain
e-mails and other documents from candidates’ computers and phones, though the
ultimate client is never disclosed. “Those activities do happen in the U.S.,
and they happen all the time,” he says.
In one case, Maynor was asked to steal data as a security
test, but the individual couldn’t show an actual connection to the campaign
whose security he wanted to test. In another, a potential client asked for a
detailed briefing on how a candidate’s movements could be tracked by switching
out the user’s iPhone for a bugged clone. “For obvious reasons, we always
turned them down,” says Maynor, who declines to name the candidates involved.
Three weeks before Sepúlveda’s arrest, Rendón was forced
to resign from Santos’s campaign amid allegations in the press that he took $12
million from drug traffickers and passed part of it on to the candidate,
something he denies.
According to Rendón, Colombian officials interviewed him
shortly afterward in Miami, where he keeps a home. Rendón says that Colombian
investigators asked him about Sepúlveda and that he told them Sepúlveda’s role
was limited to Web development.
Rendón denies working with Sepúlveda in any meaningful
capacity. “He says he worked with me in 20 places, and the truth is he didn’t,”
Rendón says. “I never paid Andrés Sepúlveda a peso.”
Last year, based on anonymous sources, the Colombian
media reported that Rendón was working for Donald Trump’s presidential
campaign. Rendón calls the reports untrue. The campaign did approach him, he
says, but he turned them down because he dislikes Trump. “To my knowledge we
are not familiar with this individual,” says Trump’s spokeswoman, Hope Hicks.
“I have never heard of him, and the same goes for other senior staff members.”
But Rendón says he’s in talks with another leading U.S. presidential
campaign—he wouldn’t say which—to begin working for it once the primaries wrap
up and the general election begins.
—With Carlos Manuel Rodríguez and Matthew Bristow
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