Federal law enforcement and swing-state election officials reported bomb threats to polling stations on Tuesday, saying they believed the threats originated in Russia.
Russian officials denied any involvement in such threats.
The FBI in a statement said it was aware of such threats to polling locations in โseveral states,โ many of which appeared to โoriginate from Russian email domains.โ
It said none of the threats were considered โcredible.โ
Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes said Tuesday afternoon that his office was monitoring โunsubstantiatedโ bomb threats at four locations in Navajo Nation.
โWe have no reason to believe that any of our voters or any of our polling places are in any sort of jeopardy,โ Fontes said.
Fontes said he did have โsome reason to believe,โ however, that the threats came from Russia because the threats came from a .ru email address, though that doesnโt necessarily confirm they originated in Russia.
โWe donโt see anything in the pattern or in the distribution that would make us think that this is to affect a political outcome,โ Fontes said. โWe do, however, believe that invoking chaos, and trying to get us to kinda rattle in our boots, is the reason that theyโre doing this.โ
Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger said at a news conference that โabout five to sevenโ precincts across the state received bomb threats early Tuesday from a โforeign state actor.โ Two precincts shut down voting for 30 minutes while law enforcement investigated, but most polling places carried on without incident.
โWeโre pretty quick on our feet, and we catch them every time,โ Raffensperger said. He said voting was running smoothly, and that โlines are moving.โ
Asked what his message was for the Russians, Raffensperger said that their mission was to try to destabilize America, but โGeorgia is not going to be intimidated.โ
โIโm just really grateful Iโm an American, and Iโm not from Russia,โ Raffensperger also said.
U.S. officials have accused Russia and its agents of directly meddling in U.S. elections for years.
Asked for comment Tuesday, the Russian embassy directed The Times to Russian remarks from top officials in which they denied involvement. The embassy had also released a statement last week saying Russia does not interfere in U.S. elections, as if anticipating such allegations on election day.
โBefore every election, American authorities and media descend into hysteria about โRussain disinformation and inference,โโ the embassy wrote. โRussia has not and does not interfere in the internal affairs of other countries, including the U.S.โ
The FBI said that election integrity is among its โhighest priorities,โ and that law enforcement would โcontinue to work closely with our state and local law enforcement partners to respond to any threats to our elections and to protect our communities as Americans exercise their right to vote.โ