Billionaire Reid Hoffman apologised on Wednesday for funding a group linked to a “highly disturbing” effort that spread disinformation during last year’s Alabama special election for US Senate, but he said he was not aware that his money was being used for this purpose.

Mr Hoffman’s statement is his first acknowledgement of his ties to a campaign that adopted tactics similar to those deployed by Russian operatives during the 2016 presidential election. In Alabama, the Hoffman-funded group allegedly used Facebook and Twitter to undermine support for Republican Roy Moore and boost Democrat Doug Jones, who narrowly won the race. Mr Hoffman, an early Facebook investor and co-founder of LinkedIn, also expressed support for a federal investigation into what happened, echoing Mr Jones’ position from last week.

The Alabama effort was one of a series of multimillion-dollar expenditures Mr Hoffman made to dozens of left-leaning groups in the aftermath of the 2016 election, when he offered himself to reeling Democrats as a source of money, connections and Silicon Valley-style disruption to the staid world of party politics.

Mr Hoffman invested $750,000 (£593,000) in one group, American Engagement Technologies (AET) according to a person close to the matter but not authorised to discuss Mr Hoffman’s spending. Mr Hoffman’s statement on Wednesday referred to AET, which has been linked to a campaign to spread disinformation targeting Mr Moore.

But the statement left key facts unaddressed, including a full accounting of everyone who crafted and executed the campaign. The effort was the subject of a presentation in September to a group of liberal-leaning technology experts who met in downtown Washington to discuss electoral tactics, according to one of the attendees and documents from the meeting obtained by The Washington Post. This person spoke on the condition of anonymity because those at the gathering were required to sign non-disclosure agreements.

Mr Hoffman said in the statement: “I find the tactics that have been recently reported highly disturbing. For that reason, I am embarrassed by my failure to track AET – the organisation I did support – more diligently as it made its own decisions to perhaps fund projects that I would reject.”

The head of AET, former Obama administration official and Google engineer Mikey Dickerson, has not responded to numerous requests for comment.

Mr Hoffman’s public apology follows news reports on the effort, known as Project Birmingham, which involved the creation of misleading Facebook pages to persuade Alabama conservatives to vote for somebody other than Mr Moore.

One Project Birmingham tactic described in the document said backers had created false online evidence that a network of Russian automated accounts, called bots, were supporting Mr Moore. In his statement, Mr Hoffman called this report “the most disturbing aspect” of the disinformation effort. This and some other key details were first reported in The New York Times.

Mr Hoffman’s statement said AET had provided funding for New Knowledge, a Texas-based research firm whose CEO Jonathon Morgan has acknowledged using disinformation tactics on a small scale in the Alabama election for a research project. Mr Morgan has repeatedly denied involvement in the broader effort described in news reports.

Mr Morgan said on Wednesday he was not aware that the funding for the work in Alabama, which he portrayed as for research purposes, came from Mr Hoffman. “I can’t object strongly enough to the characterisation that we were trying to influence an election in any way,” Mr Morgan said.

Facebook suspended Mr Morgan and other individuals on Saturday for violating its policies against “coordinated inauthentic” behaviour during the 2017 Alabama election.

Alabama Senate race: Roy Moore vs Doug Jones Show all 12 1 /12 Alabama Senate race: Roy Moore vs Doug Jones Alabama Senate race: Roy Moore vs Doug Jones Democratic senatorial candidate Doug Jones speaks to reporters after voting Getty Images Alabama Senate race: Roy Moore vs Doug Jones Republican Senatorial candidate Roy Moore (L) and his wife Kayla ride their horses to the polling station to vote AFP/Getty Images Alabama Senate race: Roy Moore vs Doug Jones David Watson waves in a Santa suit as he holds a Doug Jones sign AP Alabama Senate race: Roy Moore vs Doug Jones Republican Senatorial candidate Roy Moore speaks to the media as his wife Kayla (R) looks on AFP/Getty Images Alabama Senate race: Roy Moore vs Doug Jones Democratic Alabama Senate candidate Doug Jones casts his vote at Brookwood Baptist Church REUTERS Alabama Senate race: Roy Moore vs Doug Jones Roy Moore speaks to the media after he rode in on a horse to vote AP Alabama Senate race: Roy Moore vs Doug Jones Democratic candidate Doug Jones greets supporters after casting his ballot AP Alabama Senate race: Roy Moore vs Doug Jones Republican Senate candidate Roy Moore departs on horseback after he cast his ballot in Gallant REUTERS Alabama Senate race: Roy Moore vs Doug Jones Voters wait in line to cast their ballot at a polling station setup in the St Thomas Episcopal Church Getty Images Alabama Senate race: Roy Moore vs Doug Jones Democratic Senatorial candidate Doug Jones (L) greets voters outside of a polling station at the Bessemer Civic Center Getty Images Alabama Senate race: Roy Moore vs Doug Jones Voters exit after casting their ballots at a polling station setup in the Fire Department Getty Images Alabama Senate race: Roy Moore vs Doug Jones Democratic Alabama U.S. Senate candidate Doug Jones speaks with the media after casting his vote at Brookwood Baptist Church Reuters

In his statement, Mr Hoffman sought to distance himself from misleading online tactics, saying; “I want to be unequivocal: there is absolutely no place in our democracy for manipulating facts or using falsehoods to gain political advantage.” Along with donations to party candidates, Mr Hoffman said he has backed “dozens of organisations”.

Mr Hoffman coordinated many of his investments with Investing in US, a group led by Dmitri Mehlhorn, Mr Hoffman’s long-time top political adviser. Mr Mehlhorn said on Wednesday he was “not aware of Project Birmingham”.

Mr Mehlhorn previously acknowledged a willingness to experiment with some tactics honed by the Internet Research Agency, the Russian disinformation operation charged with US officials with several crimes for meddling in the US election.

“The Internet Research Agency engaged in many, many tactics, some of which I think it is appropriate for us to mirror and some of which I think we should disavow,” Mr Melhorn said last week. “The tactics they engaged in [that] we need to disavow [include] misinformation and promoting racial hatred. The tactics we need to mirror are really good social micro-targeting.”

Throughout the 2018 election season, Mr Hoffman directed his cash towards other organisations that aimed to target conservatives on Facebook. These groups created pages and purchased ads on the social network with the goal of trying to “appeal to the centre right” of the political spectrum, Mr Mehlhorn said. They sought to get those users’ attention on topics including patriotism and sports, then presented them with real political news stories and policy-focused ads.

Central to that effort was News for Democracy, which received money from Mr Hoffman, according to a person with knowledge of the investment but not authorised to speak on the record. Over the past year, it created or promoted Facebook pages including “Sounds Like Tennessee”, the person said.

The Facebook page appeared to be about sharing news about college football and local hunters. But it also bought at least one ad that criticised since-elected GOP Senator Marsha Blackburn for her record on opioid abuse, according to Facebook’s ad archive.

In total, News for Democracy had vast reach: its ads garnered at least 16 million impressions on Facebook over a two-week period in September, according to researchers at New York University’s Tandon School of Engineering.

The organisation is not required to identify its donors, and Mr Hoffman declined to comment through an aide. Mr Mehlhorn said he sits on the group’s board of directors and Investing in US has pitched it as a potential place for Democratic donors to direct their support.

“Social media tends to drive people into hyper-partisan camps,” said Dan Fletcher, the founder of MotiveAI, another Hoffman-backed startup that sought to target political messages to voters on Facebook. “Part of what we’ve tried to figure out is whether there’s a way you can reach people with facts that stretch beyond just a left versus right dichotomy.”