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The Register: Putin’s trolls return with AI-powered media fakes — and a Florida ex-cop at the helm

The site “Clear Story News” mimics the look of a legitimate US news outlet, but is part of a broader Russian disinformation operation that uses AI-generated content to spread Kremlin-aligned narratives in the West.

A sprawling Russian disinformation network tied to a former Florida sheriff’s deputy has resurfaced in 2025 with over 200 newly created fake news websites. Backed by Russia’s military intelligence agency and powered by artificial intelligence, the network is using fabricated news, forged documents, and deepfakes to push pro-Kremlin and pro-Trump narratives to voters in the United States, Canada, and Europe, The Register reports.

As the Kremlin scales up its disinfo operations, the US government is simultaneously dismantling federal efforts to protect elections from such foreign interference.

Russian troll farm floods the web with fake media outlets

Researchers from Recorded Future’s Insikt Group published new findings on 18 September 2025, revealing that a known Russian propaganda operation known as CopyCop—or Storm-1516—has launched over 200 new websites this year alone. These sites serve up political disinformation using self-hosted large language models based on Meta’s Llama 3. The AI-generated content is designed to mimic local journalism, while pushing Russian-aligned narratives and targeting political figures across multiple countries.

Insikt Group attributes the network to John Mark Dougan, a former Florida deputy sheriff who fled to Moscow and was granted political asylum in 2016. He is described by the researchers as a Kremlin-aligned operator linked to the GRU and the Moscow-based Center for Geopolitical Expertise. Both the US Treasury and Washington Post have previously reported his involvement in disinformation campaigns.

According to the researchers, the GRU “almost certainly” finances the infrastructure powering the network’s LLM servers, which are used to rewrite content from real media sources, generate false articles, and produce deepfakes targeting high-profile political figures in the US, France, Ukraine, and beyond.

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From Harris as a rhino poacher to forged Zelenskyy documents

The same disinformation network previously posted a bizarre video falsely accusing then-Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris of being a rhino poacher in the run-up to the 2024 US election. 

In 2025, the network is continuing these tactics. One site—clearstory[.]news—published a fake story in March accusing Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of using US taxpayer money to pay journalists to portray US President Donald Trump negatively. The article cited what Insikt Group believes to be a forged document on official Ukrainian presidential letterhead. This story was one of several allegedly rewritten using an AI model.

Six of the fake media websites have already made appearances on social media: allstatesnews[.]us, capitalcitydaily[.]com, fldaily[.]news, silvercity[.]news, usatimes[.]news, and wval[.]news. While most of these mimic local US news outlets, the content often focuses on international issues, especially Russia and Ukraine.

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Fake fact-checkers, political parties, and separatists

Since January, researchers have tracked sites pretending to be local media or political organizations in the US, France, Canada, Norway, and Armenia. Some sites present themselves as fact-checkers writing in Turkish, Ukrainian, or Swahili. Of the 200 sites created this year, 35 were registered in January but only detected by Insikt Group in April. These, the researchers say, were “almost certainly designed for engaging US-based audiences.

In addition to targeting the US and Europe, the disinformation network appears to be expanding into Canada. Two new sites—albertaseparatist[.]com and torontojournal[.]ca—tap into growing separatist sentiment in Alberta, seeking to polarize the Canadian public along political lines.

CopyCop’s known operations now total at least 300 fake websites, including 94 previously documented that targeted Germany’s February 2025 federal elections.

Federal protections weakened as election threats grow

The report comes amid growing concern about the federal government’s reduced efforts to combat online disinformation. US Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has significantly cut the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency’s (CISA) work on election-related disinformation, leaving state-level election workers without federal support as they prepare for the 2026 midterms.

Insikt Group’s Director of Global Issues, Matt Mooney, told The Register that the Kremlin’s intent is clear:

CopyCop’s substantial expansion of infrastructure demonstrates intent to persist and evolve in the global information environment.”

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