FBI probes strange texts asking for cash, pardon advice from person impersonating White House chief of staff Susie Wiles: reportĀ
The FBI is investigating an effort by an unknown individual to impersonate White House chief of staff Susie Wiles, according to a report.
The imposter has reportedly fired off text messages and placed phone calls to Republican lawmakers, governors and business executives in recent weeks pretending to be Wiles, .
Itās unclear who is behind the campaign, and what their goal is, but the faker appears to be using artificial intelligence to mimic Wilesās voice ā and in one case asked for cash transfer, according to the outlet.
One text from the person claiming to be Wiles asked a lawmaker to put together a list of people who could be pardoned by President Trump.
The messages were suspicious to some because they didnāt come from Wilesās phone number, asked questions about Trump that the chief of staff wouldāve known, were more formal than usual and contained broken grammar.
FBI officials have informed the White House they donāt suspect a foreign nation is behind the con.
āThe White House takes the cybersecurity of all staff very seriously, and this matter continues to be investigated,ā a White House spokeswoman told the Wall Street Journal.
Earlier this month, the of āan ongoing malicious text and voice messaging campaignā that has been occurring since April, where actors have āimpersonated senior US officials to target individuals, many of whom are current or former senior US federal or state government officials and their contacts.
āThe malicious actors have sent text messages and AI-generated voice messages ā techniques known as smishing and vishing, respectively ā that claim to come from a senior US official in an effort to establish rapport before gaining access to personal accounts,ā read the warning released by the bureau on May 15.
It’s unclear if the warning was issued in response to the Wiles hack.
FBI Director Kash Patel told the Journal that the bureau ātakes all threats against the president, his staff, and our cybersecurity with the utmost seriousness.ā
āSafeguarding our administration officialsā ability to securely communicate to accomplish the presidentās mission is a top priority,ā he added.
Wiles has reportedly told associates that the contacts on her personal cellphone are the ones that have been hacked, and she has urged them to disregard the strange messages ā which have been sent as recently as when Trump and Wiles were in the Middle East two weeks ago.
Wilesā email account was reportedly hacked by Iranian operatives targeting the Trump campaign during last yearās presidential campaign.
Three members of Iranās notorious Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) were indicted over the hacking last September.
The White House and FBI did not immediately respond to The Postās request for comment.