Roger Stone, longtime adviser to President Trump, has been indicted by Special Counsel Robert Mueller on seven counts.

A 24-page indictment released Friday outlines how Stone allegedly misled Congress about his contact with an intermediary to WikiLeaks and ultimately tried to intimidate a witness from cooperating with investigators. Here are some of the most staggering details the indictment reveals:

1. After WikiLeaks released stolen DNC emails in July 2016, a senior Trump campaign official "was directed to contact Stone" to inquire about "any additional releases." The indictment doesn't specify who in the Trump campaign told the official to reach out to Stone.

This is the most intriguing line of the Roger Stone indictment. "A senior Trump

Campaign official WAS DIRECTED to contact Stone". Who directed the official? Mueller knows. He knows all about the Campaign's inner workings. pic.twitter.com/uBKIEpM69k — Arieh Kovler (@ariehkovler) January 25, 2019

2. In October 2016, after WikiLeaks released stolen campaign emails from Hillary Clinton, an associate of a high-ranking Trump campaign official texted Stone, "well done." The indictment also says Stone talked with "multiple individuals involved in the Trump campaign" about his contacts with his intermediary to WikiLeaks and then falsely told Congress he hadn't done so.

3. Stone is accused of instructing "Person 2," his intermediary to WikiLeaks, to lie to Congress by telling him he "should do a 'Frank Pentangeli,'" referencing a character from The Godfather: Part II who lies to Congress.

4. Stone, the indictment says, told Congress he never talked to "Person 2" in writing, when Stone and his contact actually "... engaged in frequent written communication by email and text messages." These emails and texts are cited throughout the indictment.