One of the interesting things about the latest Mueller indictment: it looks like there were two Russian troll operations targeting the US in 2016, not just the Internet Research Agency one.
It's a hashtag which, as far as we know from the @NBCNews archive and other saves, was not pushed by the troll farm.
There's not much left of the hashtag online. What there is looks extremely dodgy.
Some posts just used the hashtag.
Some posted the hashtag and a meme.
Almost all of them only ever posted once. Hardly organic behaviour. Looks like an amateurish attempt to make a hashtag trend.
Again, not something the troll farm also pushed, as far as we know.
One site - WeAreChange.org - published an article on the hashtag regardless. It played up the size of the event, apparently trying to amplify it more.
Who was the author?
Alice Donovan.
The article said the hashtag was launched by a grassroots group called "Baltimore is Everywhere." It said the group worked with the @NAAPB, and posted a screenshot attributed to NAAPB founder Jonathan Newton.
We checked the post. As far as we can tell, it's a fake.
#OPCW hacking case: we've already had the Russian government trying to dismiss the latest UK / NL claims about the #GRU. That's tactic number 1.
Up next, expect attempts to distort, distract and dismay.
Distort. We saw this with the Skripal suspects, portrayed as "civilians" and snow-shy tourists.
Expect attempts to say that the photos were faked, the evidence was made up, and / or the men were harmless visitors on a diplomatic visit to fix the Embassy wifi.
Distract. Accuse the accusers.
Expect the arguments, "The West hacks people too," or "You killed civilians in Libya / Afghanistan / Vietnam / insert name here."
Which doesn't justify use of CW on civilians, or attempts to cover it up.
Looks like someone tried to get hashtag SkripalHoax to trend overnight.
822 mentions. It really didn't do very well.
Let's look at some of the arguments.
Probably the most popular in the pro-Kremlin crowd was the claim that the Met Police photos of the arrival in Gatwick had the same timestamp, and therefore must have been photoshopped.
... unless there's more than one arrival channel at Gatwick, and they were walking together.