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Hacker 'Guccifer 2.0' Releases More DNC Docs — Including Tim Kaine's Cell Number

The interim chair of the Democratic National Committee blamed the Russian government for the most recent release — charges Moscow denies.
Image: Tim Kaine
Democratic vice presidential candidate, Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va. speaks during a campaign rally in Wilmington, North Carolina, Sept. 6.Chuck Burton / AP

The hacker or hackers who claim to have broken into Democratic Party systems released more documents Tuesday, including what appeared to be the personal cell phone of vice presidential candidate Tim Kaine.

"Guccifer 2.0" released over 670 megabytes of documents at a cybersecurity conference in London Tuesday.

The work cell phone numbers, personal email addresses and personal cell phone numbers of top Obama White House officials were also included in the cache.

Kaine’s title on the spreadsheet of contacts is "Chairman’s Office" — which might mean that the document was created from 2009 to 2011, when Kaine was with the Democratic National Committee. The metadata shows that it was last modified on April 4, 2010.

It doesn’t appear any emails were included in the documents released.

But the DNC’s holiday card list for 2010, Federal Election Commission filings, early voter lists and a plan for redistricting were all in the dump.

Other files have to do with donor lists and technology updates for DNC-related apps.

The DNC, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, U.S. intelligence officials and other experts suspect Russian involvement.

Related: Russian Hackers Post 'Medical Files' of Simone Biles, Serena Williams

The release of stolen DNC emails on the website WikiLeaks days before the party’s national convention appeared to show some officials favored Clinton over rival Bernie Sanders, deepening divisions.

Interim DNC Chair Donna Brazile on Tuesday again blamed the Russian government for the hack and called it an "effort to influence the presidential election."

"There’s one person who stands to benefit from these criminal acts, and that’s Donald Trump," she said. The Trump campaign did not respond to a request for a response Tuesday night.

The authenticity of the documents is unknown, however to date all the documents released by the person or people calling themselves "Guccifer 2.0" have proven to be authentic. Kaine's campaign declined to comment on the document dump.

The file is titled "Contact List — Complete List" and it contains official cell phone numbers of current Senior Advisor to the President Valerie Jarrett and former advisers Rahm Emmanuel and Daniel Pfeiffer. Other White House staffers and Obama campaign staffer information is also included in the list.

The documents were released on a file storage system and not on WikiLeaks or on Guccifer 2.0's website.

The name "Guccifer 2.0" appears to be based on "Guccifer," the hacker that originally exposed Hillary Clinton’s private email server.

That hacker, a Romanian cab driver named Marcel Lazar, pleaded guilty two federal charges in May and was sentenced to four years and four months in prison on Sept. 1.

Brazile said the DNC was working to determine the authenticity of the documents, and warned “it is common for Russian hackers to forge documents.”

"We have been anticipating that an additional batch of documents stolen by Russian agents would be released," Brazile said.

Related: Same Russians Hacked Olympic Whistleblowers, Democrats

Also on Tuesday, hackers linked to the Russian government released documents claimed to be drug-testing files of American Olympic athletes.

The documents have not been confirmed authentic or unaltered by NBC News. Russian athletes were banned from the Rio Olympics — and Paralympics — after recommendations by the World Anti-Doping Agency due to evidence of widespread doping.

The Russian government has denied being involved in the hacks. Russian President Vladimir Putin said in a Bloomnberg interview this month that while Russia was not behind the DNC hack, he considered the release of DNC emails a public service.