In an interview with Yahoo Politics, an adviser to the campaign of Sen. Bernie Sanders hinted that the data breach that resulted in the campaign losing access to the DNC servers may have been the result of a employee planted in the campaign by the DNC.
Following the controversy that saw Sanders staffers blocked from accessing some of their own voter data after it was revealed that proprietary information belonging to the Clinton campaign was being viewed, the Sanders campaign apologized and fired the “hacker,” national data director, Josh Uretsky.
However, an unnamed adviser to the Vermont independent’s campaign for the 2016 Democratic presidential nomination is suggesting that Uretsky maybe have been a plant by both the DNC and the technology company that hosts the data.
“It’s
not as if we conjured this guy Josh from thin air. This is an
individual … who was recommended to us by the DNC and NGP VAN,” the
adviser said.
According
to the adviser, Uretsky provided references to the Sanders campaign
from the DNC’s National Data Director Andrew Brown, who works closely
with the shared voter file program.
“Andrew
Brown spoke to us and gave him a positive review, as did this guy Bryan
Whitaker,” the adviser said, identifying Whitaker as the COO of
technology group NGP VAN. Whitaker is no longer with the company, having
taken a similar position with another group.
Supporters
of Sanders have complained that the DNC favors Clinton — the
establishment favorite — noting that the Democratic debates have been
scheduled on weekend evenings when viewership would be down, limiting
exposure for the populist message of Sanders.
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