LinkedIn Profile Seems to Confirm Allegations Made in ItalyGate

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A profile seemingly matching that of a U.S. State Department employee accused of hacking the U.S. election has been discovered on professional networking platform LinkedIn. ITN was alerted to the profile by a reader.

The profile is currently live on the platform and seems to include biographical data previously reported by ITN.

The man, whose name has been communicated as Stefano Serafini, was reportedly a 20-year State Department employee who retired shortly before the election in November.

The LinkedIn profile, which is in the name “Stefano S.”, lists the individual’s start year with the Department as 1996 and his end date as November 2020. It also lists the U.S. Embassy in Rome as a place of employment from August 2018 to November 2020.

He is also listed as a 2017 graduate of the National Defense University in Washington in the education section of the profile, which is consistent with information ITN has previously reported.

Stefano Serafini LinkedIn Profile 2.14.21

 

Allegations made in the ItalyGate scandal, most notably through Maria Strollo-Zack and her organization Nations in Action™, say a U.S. State Department employee acting along with intelligence operatives hacked the U.S. election from the U.S. Embassy in Rome. Votes were switched electronically from President Trump to Joe Biden it is alleged with the help of satellites owned and operated by billion-dollar Italian defense contractor Leonardo SpA.

ITN has reached out repeatedly to the gentleman in question – both through this LinkedIn profile and other channels that have been discovered – to offer him an opportunity to deny the accusations. So far our requests for comment have gone unanswered.

We have also repeatedly requested comment from the U.S. State Department, most recently through a Freedom of Information Act Request that looked to confirm only the date the employee left the agency. We were told we would have to wait until September 2022 for the request to be answered.

LinkedIn logo photo via Pixabay

4 thoughts on “LinkedIn Profile Seems to Confirm Allegations Made in ItalyGate

  1. Since the last update to the LinkedIn profile is November 2020, and since the penalty for treason is summary execution, it is reasonable to assume that Stefano Serafini is no longer in this world. I suspect the same holds true for Gina Haspel, who reportedly “begged for her life.” There is a limit to the number of child-traffickers and traitors they can hold in their off-shore military prisons.

  2. Almost two years from the 2020 election. Isn’t that the length of time ballots and voting machine records need to be kept?

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