On Friday afternoon, a long-awaited development finally came to light: Special Counsel Robert Mueller and his team brought forth an indictment against over a dozen Russian nationals and a number of organizations, the most visible of which were Russian businessman Yevgeny Prigozhin and the Internet Research Agency (IRA).

The 37-page indictment contained both new facts and a rehash of old information publicly available since 2014 about one of the most infamous “industries” in St. Petersburg, the so-called troll factory. Much of the indictment corroborated the U.S. Intelligence Community Assessment from January 2017 with specific charges and evidence added.

The indictment removed any doubt, if there was still any, that Russia unleashed a campaign of aggressive information operation aimed at influencing the outcome of the 2016 U.S. presidential election, eroding faith in U.S. democratic institutions, sowing doubt in the integrity of our electoral process, and driving increased polarization between U.S. citizens.

Much will be uncovered in the coming days, but much of the information offered in today’s indictment was already available in open sources. @DFRLab canvassed the names and highlights from the indictment, in order to shed more light on Russia’s efforts to sow digital discord in America’s political discourse.