On Friday afternoon, the Justice Department announced that Russia and the world’s most interesting catering company continue to attack the United States online—and that Russian Twitter trolls had even defended the efforts of special counsel Robert Mueller earlier this year.

Prosecutors unsealed a September criminal complaint against Elena Alekseevna Khusyaynova, a 44-year-old Russian woman from St. Petersburg. According to the charges, Khusyaynova is employed by the Internet Research Agency, the “troll farm” directed by a Russian oligarch known as “Putin’s Cook,” Yevgeniy Viktorovich Prigozhin, and two companies he controls, Concord Management and Consulting LLC, and Concord Catering. Those companies, in addition to handling school lunches for Russian children and overseeing the Internet Research Agency, also reportedly supply mercenaries to support Russia’s interests in the Syrian civil war.

According to the US government, Khusyaynova served as the chief accountant of “Project Lakhta,” the information influence operation funded by Prigozhin. She was charged with conspiracy to defraud the United States.

The timing—coming on a Friday afternoon barely three weeks before the congressional midterm elections—underscored what US officials have hinted at in recent weeks, namely that foreign nation states continue to target US politics with so-called “information influence operations” aimed at exploiting partisan discord.

“This case serves as a stark reminder to all Americans: Our foreign adversaries continue their efforts to interfere in our democracy by creating social and political division, spreading distrust in our political system, and advocating for the support or defeat of particular political candidates,” FBI Director Christopher Wray said in announcing the charges Friday.

In a separate statement, the Office of Director of National Intelligence said it was “concerned about ongoing campaigns by Russia, China, and other foreign actors, including Iran, to undermine confidence in democratic institutions and influence public sentiment and government policies. These activities also may seek to influence voter perceptions and decision making in the 2018 and 2020 U. elections.” It was quick to note, too, though, the US “[does] not have any evidence of a compromise or disruption of infrastructure that would enable adversaries to prevent voting, change vote counts, or disrupt our ability to tally votes in the midterm elections.”

"The approach is the same, which is: Identify and infiltrate audiences on both the left and the right, and try to pit them against each other." Clint Watts, FPRI

Nevertheless, the criminal complaint contains page after page of various online posts and memes purported to stem from the team at Project Lakhta, all aimed at inflaming American political debates. “The conspiracy allegedly used social media and other internet platforms to address a wide variety of topics, including immigration, gun control and the Second Amendment, the Confederate flag, race relations, LGBT issues, the Women’s March, and the NFL national anthem debate,” the government wrote. Russian trolls allegedly aim at specific events as well, including mass shootings in Las Vegas and Charleston, last summer's white nationalist gathering in Charlottesville, and various personnel and policy decisions by the Trump administration.

The charges, though, made clear that Project Lakhta operatives were equal opportunity political opportunists—weighing in on both sides of political divisions and even, earlier this year, tweeting about Mueller’s indictment of their 13 IRA colleagues, writing, in part, “Still think this Russia thing is a hoax and a witch hunt? Because a lot of witches just got indicted.”

In other tweets, the alleged Project Lahkta accounts actually urged people to protect Mueller; on December 16, 2017, the indictment says, a fake Twitter account called @KaniJJackson posted, “If Trump fires Robert Mueller, we have to take to the streets in protest. Our democracy is at stake.” A day later, another account egged Mueller on, saying, “Keep the implosion coming Mueller.”

In the wake of the Florida mass shooting at Parkland High School, one of the Russian accounts even urged voters to turn against the GOP: “Vote them out in 2018!” A month later, that same account called for Donald Trump to win a Nobel Peace Prize for his North Korea outreach.

Many of the efforts, the government says, were funneled through “sock puppet” Facebook accounts, with fake names like “Bertha Malone” and “Helen Christopherson,” and Twitter accounts like @CovfefeNationUS, which would post divisive content and even in some cases contact US political organizers with tips and proposals on events.