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C O R R E C T I O N S
l An article about a heart
transplant that took place in
Virginia in 1986 in this
weekend’s Washington Post
Magazine, which was printed in
advance, misidentifies Alan
Speir, one of the surgeons
involved in that transplant, as
the person who sewed a new
heart into former vice president
Richard B. Cheney in 2012. Speir
was part of the team that
performed Cheney’s surgery, but
the principal surgeon — the
person who sewed in the new
heart — was Anthony Rongione.
l A Sept. 23 A-section article
about the World Health
Organization accusing officials
in Tanzania of withholding
information about suspected
Ebola cases misidentified the
capital of that country. It is
Dodoma, not Dar es Salaam,
which is the former capital.
l A March 24 A-section article
about a growing insurgency in
Burkina Faso incorrectly said
that Air Force Maj. Gen. J.
Marcus Hicks, then head of U.S.
Special Operations Command
Africa, was talking to a group of
reporters when he said, “I would
tell you at this time, we are not
winning” in the region. He was
speaking to Voice of America.
Collins resigns over
insider trading case
Former Republican
congressman Chris Collins of
New York pleaded guilty
Tuesday to two charges in an
insider-trading case, just over a
year after proclaiming his
innocence to allegations he
schemed with his son to avoid
significant losses on a
biotechnology investment.
Collins, President Trump’s first
congressional supporter,
resigned from the House on
Monday.
washingtonpost.com/national
Ruling favors Harvard
in admissions case
A federal judge ruled Tuesday
that Harvard University does not
discriminate against Asian
Americans in undergraduate
admissions, handing the school
a victory in a lawsuit that marks
one of the latest chapters in the
affirmative action debate. U.S.
District Judge Allison D.
Burroughs rejected a plaintiff ’s
claims that Harvard violates the
law as it considers race in
selecting an incoming freshman
class.
washingtonpost.com/education
U-Md. student paper
to end print edition
After more than a century in
circulation, the student
newspaper at the University of
Maryland’s flagship campus will
cease publishing a weekly print
edition in March, the
publication’s parent company
announced Monday. Leaders of
the Diamondback cited
economic pressures and growing
online readership in their
decision to remove the paper
from College Park news racks.
washingtonpost.com/education
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I N C A S E Y O U M I S S E D I T
Some reports that you may have missed. Read more at washingtonpost.com.
Sanders undergoes
heart procedure
Democratic presidential
contender Bernie Sanders was
treated for an artery blockage
this week, sidelining him from a
race in which the candidates’ age
and physical health have been
significant factors. The senator
from Vermont was hospitalized
after experiencing chest pains at
a Tuesday campaign event. It
was revealed Friday that he had
suffered a heart attack. Story,
A
washingtonpost.com/national
Dallas police officer
sentenced to 10 years
The white former police
officer who shot and killed her
unarmed black neighbor in his
own apartment was sentenced
Wednesday to 10 years in prison.
Amber Guyger, 31, could have
faced up to 99 years in the 2018
slaying of Botham Jean, a 26-
year-old St. Lucia native, church
singer and accountant whose
death sparked protests.
washingtonpost.com/national
WTO: U.S. can impose
tariffs on E.U. goods
The World Trade Organization
on Wednesday authorized
President Trump to impose
tariffs on about $7.5 billion
worth of European goods,
capping a 15-year transatlantic
dispute over illegal subsidies to
aircraft maker Airbus. The
decision — the largest in the
trade body’s history — opened
the door to a broader trade war
with the European Union. The
administration plans to impose
tariffs of 10 percent on European
aircraft and 25 percent on a
variety of agricultural and
industrial products.
washingtonpost.com/business
BY KAREN WEINTRAUB
AND NICK ANDERSON
boston — A California winemak-
er whom authorities describe as a
“demanding fraud client” was
sentenced Friday to five months in
prison for conspiring to inflate the
SAT score of one of his daughters
and secure her admission to the
University of Southern California
as a phony water polo recruit.
Agustin F. Huneeus, 53, of San
Francisco, pleaded guilty in May
to fraud conspiracy in the college
admissions bribery scandal. Un-
like other parents sentenced so
far, he participated in both parts
of the scam uncovered in the Var-
sity Blues investigation: test
cheating and athletic recruiting
fraud.
U.S. District Judge Indira Tal-
wani imposed a slightly longer
prison term on Huneeus than four
parents previously sentenced,
who received terms from two
weeks to four months. Talwani
also sentenced Huneeus to two
years of supervised release and
ordered him to pay a $100,
fine and provide 500 hours of
community service.
Huneeus’s attorneys had sug-
gested a two-month prison term.
But prosecutors had recommend-
ed 15 months, arguing in a sen-
tencing memorandum that he
participated vigorously in the
scam with admitted mastermind
William “Rick” Singer.
In spring 2018, court records
show, Huneeus paid $50,000 for
his second-oldest daughter to ob-
tain illicit help on the SAT from a
corrupt proctor during and after
the test. Afterward, prosecutors
said, Huneeus was upset his
daughter received a score of only
1380 out of a maximum 1600.
Singer told the father, records
show, that a higher score “would
have got investigated for sure
based on her grades.”
Later that year, Huneeus
agreed to pay Singer $250,000 to
help the daughter get into USC as
a purported water polo recruit.
She had played the sport, records
indicate, but not at a level that
would qualify for intercollegiate
competition.
The consultant spelled out the
scheme in detail in a wiretapped
August 2018 phone call, according
to court records. First, Huneeus
would pay $50,000 when his
daughter received provisional ac-
ceptance as a recruited athlete.
“Okay, so there’s no chance I
give that 50 and then she’s not
admitted?” Huneeus asked, ac-
cording to the records.
“You won’t send it until you get
the letter,” Singer replied. The con-
sultant told Huneeus he would
pay a second installment of
$200,000 after his daughter re-
ceived a formal admission offer.
Huneeus told Singer his daugh-
ter was “not worthy to be on that
team,” records show, and he wor-
ried that the scheme could “blow
up in my face... like some article
comes out that the, the polo team
is selling seats into the school for
250 grand.” Singer assured him
there was no risk.
Singer pleaded guilty in March
to racketeering conspiracy and
other crimes and is cooperating
with the investigation. The daugh-
ter, one of four in the Huneeus
family, was not charged with a
crime. She was conditionally ac-
cepted to USC in November 2018,
records show, but never received
final admission. Her father was
arrested, prosecutors said, before
the school released formal offers.
In a letter to the court,
Huneeus’s wife praised their
daughter’s resilience, saying she
retook the SAT and is enrolled at
another college.
Huneeus, born in Chile, is a
naturalized U.S. citizen and the
son of a vintner. After earning a
bachelor’s degree from the Uni-
versity of California at Berkeley
and a master’s in business admin-
istration from Northwestern Uni-
versity, he followed his parents
into the family wine business in
northern California. But his ca-
reer is in jeopardy because of his
felony conviction. Huneeus ex-
pressed remorse for his crime.
“I am looking forward to my
sentencing so I can start to put
this behind me,” Huneeus wrote
the judge on Sept. 25. “I want to
pay my dues and feel clean again.”
On Friday, Huneeus reiterated
that he wants to atone.
“I am deeply ashamed of myself
for taking part in a scheme that
could have taken a deserving stu-
dent’s future away,” he said at the
hearing. “My actions threatened
to disadvantage the very people
the system was already stacked
against.”
[email protected]
Anderson reported from Washington.
Vintner sentenced to 5 months in college scandal
BY JAY GREENE,
TONY ROMM
AND ELLEN NAKASHIMA
seattle — An effort believed to
be tied to the Iranian government
attempted to identify, attack and
breach email accounts belonging
to a U.S. presidential campaign,
government officials and journal-
ists, according to new data un-
veiled by Microsoft, highlighting
the continued global security
threats that loom over the fast-ap-
proaching 2020 election.
The intrusion observed by
Microsoft, spearheaded by an out-
fit it calls Phosphorus, made more
than 2,700 attempts to identify
personal email addresses that be-
longed to the company’s custom-
ers over a 30-day period between
August and September, 241 of
which were then attacked. Four
were compromised, but they do
not belong to the presidential
campaign or government officials,
according to the tech giant.
Reuters and other news media
outlets reported Friday that the
hackers had targeted President
Trump’s campaign.
Microsoft said it notified the
customers attacked and has
worked with those whose ac-
counts were compromised to se-
cure them. It declined to disclose
the names of the account holders,
including the presidential cam-
paign that had been targeted.
Microsoft declined to comment
beyond a blog post disclosing the
news on Friday.
Tim Murtaugh, a spokesman
for President Trump’s 2020 cam-
paign, said he has “no indication
that any of our campaign infra-
structure was targeted.” Asked to
clarify whether Microsoft had
contacted the campaign about Ira-
nian targeting of either the cam-
paign or campaign personnel’s
personal email accounts, Mur-
taugh said: “We have no further
comment.”
The news Friday is the latest
reminder that the United States is
probably still vulnerable to secu-
rity threats when it comes to the
2020 presidential election — and
not just from Russia. Analysts
have seen an increase in cyber-
activity by Iran and its proxies in
recent months targeting the Unit-
ed States and other countries, as
tensions have heightened be-
tween Iran and the West.
Tech giants such as Facebook
and Twitter, and politicians and
security officials have all made the
next presidential election a priori-
ty as they race to combat hackers
— some of whom are working for
foreign governments.
Still, recent technology devel-
opments, such as increasingly re-
alistic “deepfake” or otherwise
manipulated videos, have many
cybersecurity experts concerned
about how hackers might be able
to influence public perception.
During the last presidential
election, U.S. officials uncovered a
sprawling Kremlin-backed effort
on major social media sites to
trigger social and political unrest.
Russian hackers also targeted
Democratic candidate Hillary
Clinton by hacking the emails of
one of her top lieutenants, the
contents of which were later
dumped on WikiLeaks.
Since then, other countries
have come to adopt more of Rus-
sia’s playbook. Iran for years had
targeted U.S. officials through
“large-scale intrusion attempts,”
said John Hultquist, the director
of intelligence analysis at the cy-
bersecurity firm FireEye. But it
has become more aggressive re-
cently in response to President
Trump, who has imposed exten-
sive sanctions and pulled out of an
international deal over the coun-
try’s nuclear program, he said.
“The Iranians are very aggres-
sive, and they could leverage
whatever access they get for an
upper hand in any kind of negotia-
tions,” Hultquist added. “They
could cause a lot of mayhem.”
Other tech companies also have
been warning about the rising Ira-
nian threat, largely out of concern
that malicious actors originating
in the country were spreading dis-
information online. In May, for
example, Facebook and Twitter
said they had removed a sprawling
Iranian-based propaganda opera-
tion, including accounts that
mimicked Republican congres-
sional candidates and appeared to
try to push pro-Iranian political
messages on social media. Some of
those accounts similarly took aim
at U.S. policymakers and journal-
ists, researchers said at the time.
Christopher Krebs, director of
the Cybersecurity and Infrastruc-
ture Security Agency under the
Department of Homeland Secu-
rity, said in a statement that the
agency is working with Microsoft.
“Microsoft’s claims that a presi-
dential campaign was targeted is
yet more evidence that our adver-
saries are looking to undermine
our democratic institutions,” he
said in the statement.
Microsoft software is present in
far more computers around the
world than U.S. law enforcement
and intelligence agencies, giving
the company a broader window
into the threat.
The Democratic National Com-
mittee warned campaigns about
the Phosphorus attacks Tuesday,
noting that the hacking group has
been targeting personal and pro-
fessional email accounts. It rec-
ommended that members review
logs for connection attempts in
August and September.
“They create believable spear
phishing emails and fake Linked-
In profiles as primary tactics,” ac-
cording to the email from the DNC
obtained by The Washington Post.
Microsoft also owns the LinkedIn
professional social network.
Spokespeople for Democratic
candidates, including Sens. Eliza-
beth Warren (D-Mass.) and Cory
Booker (D-N.J.), did not immedi-
ately respond to requests for com-
ment. Spokespeople for former
vice president Joe Biden and Sen.
Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) declined to
comment. Ian Sams, a spokesman
for Sen. Kamala D. Harris (D-
Calif.), said he had “no indication
that our campaign is the one
Microsoft referenced or that we
have been targeted by this attack.”
To target political and govern-
ment officials’ emails, Phosphorus
hackers tried to figure out how to
reset passwords or otherwise trig-
ger account recovery features to
take over accounts, Microsoft said.
In some instances, Microsoft
found that the group gathered
phone numbers belonging to its
targets to try to authenticate pass-
word resets.
The attacks were not “techni-
cally sophisticated,” Microsoft’s
vice president of customer secu-
rity and trust, Tom Burt, wrote in
the blog post. But he noted that
they used significant amounts of
the targets’ personal information,
suggesting that Phosphorus was
willing to invest “significant time
and resources engaging in re-
search and other means of infor-
mation gathering.”
This isn’t Microsoft’s first brush
with Phosphorus. The company,
which names hacking groups after
elements on the periodic table,
seized 99 websites in March that it
said were used by the group to
launch cyberattacks against gov-
ernment agencies, businesses and
users in Washington. Microsoft
said it has been tracking the group
for six years. Other researchers
have tagged the group Ajax Secu-
rity Team, APT 35 and Charming
Kitten.
Phosphorus used the websites
Microsoft seized this spring to
trick visitors into downloading
malicious software that appeared
authentic. But that was only one of
the group’s tactics. In Phospho-
rus’s latest attempts, the group
tried to trick users into giving up
codes that are used for two-factor
authentication.
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
Isaac Stanley-Becker contributed to
this report.
Microsoft: Hackers targeted presidential campaign
C A L I FO RN I A
Man to be retried in
deadly warehouse fire
The founder of an artists’
work-live collective in the San
Francisco Bay area, where a fast-
moving fire trapped and killed
36 partygoers three years ago,
will be tried again on
manslaughter charges,
prosecutors said Friday.
Alameda County prosecutors
said they decided on a retrial
after a jury last month
deadlocked on whether to find
Derick Almena, 49, guilty or
innocent. Jurors split 10-2 in
favor of finding him guilty.
The same jury acquitted his
co-defendant Max Harris, 29, of
manslaughter charges in
September after an emotionally
taxing three-month trial that
drained family and friends of
defendants and victims.
Judge Trina Thompson set a
new trial date in March. She
also denied a motion by defense
attorneys to reduce bail for
Almena from $750,000 to
$50,000. He has been jailed for
more than two years.
The Dec. 2, 2016, fire broke
out during an electronic music
party at the Ghost Ship
warehouse in Oakland, killing
36 mostly young partygoers.
Prosecutors allege Almena,
who was the master tenant on
the lease, was criminally
negligent when he illegally
converted the industrial
building into a residence for
artists and held unpermitted
events inside.
— Associated Press
T E X A S
Execution stayed over
claim of anti-Semitism
A Jewish death row inmate
who faced execution in less than
a week has won a reprieve after
claiming the former judge at his
trial was anti-Semitic and
frequently used racial slurs.
The Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals on Friday granted a
stay of execution for Randy
Halprin, who had been
scheduled to receive a lethal
injection Oct. 10.
Halprin alleges in his appeal
that ex-Dallas County Judge
Vickers Cunningham referred to
him with anti-Semitic language.
Cunningham declined to
comment Friday.
Halprin was among the
inmates who escaped from a
South Texas prison in 2000 and
committed numerous robberies,
including one in which a
suburban Dallas police officer
was fatally shot.
— Associated Press
N E W J E R S E Y
After scandal, a new
Atlantic City mayor
Atlantic City got a new mayor
Friday in the wake of yet
another scandal in the seaside
gambling resort with a history
of political corruption.
City Council President Marty
Small was sworn in a day after
fellow Democrat Frank Gilliam
Jr. pleaded guilty to stealing
$87,000 from a youth basketball
club he founded. He resigned
hours later.
Gilliam pleaded guilty in
federal court in Camden to
stealing money that was
purportedly for the basketball
team and for school supplies for
poor children. But prosecutors
say he used it on himself — for
trips, fancy clothes and other
personal expenses.
Small, who has run several
times for mayor and lost a
primary to Gilliam in 2017,
himself has been charged twice
— and acquitted twice — of
election-related fraud. Gilliam
could face 20 years in prison
when he is sentenced Jan. 7.
— Associated Press
D I G E S T
JABIN BOTSFORD/THE WASHINGTON POST
Employees supporting President Trump’s 2020 campaign work at
the Republican National Convention annex in Virginia in July.
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