Anna Bogacheva, one of the dozen or so “Internet Research Agency” Russian “trolls” indicted by the United States in 2018, was previously an activist in the “Russkii Obraz” (Russian Image) nationalist movement, according to a new report by Radio Svoboda.
Journalists learned that Bogacheva used to have a VKontakte account registered under the name “Anna Trigga,” which is how she was known in nationalist circles. Bogacheva’s name also appears in the case evidence against Ilya Goryachev, the Russkii Obraz founder who was sentenced to life imprisonment in 2015, as part of the murder investigation against the far-right “Combat Organization of Russian Nationalists.”
According to Radio Svoboda, the Federal Security Service pressured Bogacheva to work for the Internet Research Agency, after the authorities tied her to nationalist groups. Journalists also recovered photographs shared on social media that suggest Bogacheva was acquainted with Maria Butina (the jailed Russian gun rights activist who pled guilty to conspiracy to act as a foreign agent, in connection with unregistered political lobbying in the United States), and Bogacheva and Butina attended at least one of the same events hosted by Butina’s gun-rights organization.
Radio Svoboda managed to learn about ties between nationalists and Evgeny Prigozhin’s current staff, including those who work in St. Petersburg in Prigozhin’s “back office,” dealing with the “African aims” of activities by “Putin’s chef.”
The Internet Research Agency
Commonly called “Russia’s Troll Factory,” the IRA pays staff to write comments on social media that boost Russian political and geopolitical talking points. In 2018, American prosecutors charged the organization with meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidential election. Specifically, the “trolls” were accused of crimes like conspiracy to defraud the U.S., conspiracy to commit wire fraud and bank fraud, and aggravated identity theft. American officials and reporters in Russia and abroad say the IRA is financed by Evgeny Prigozhin, a catering magnate who also allegedly controls the “Wagner” PMC.
The Boyevaya Organizatsiya Russkikh Natsionalistov (BORN)
A far-right group whose members were prosecuted for multiple homicides. In court, BORN members claimed to have ties to the Kremlin.