FBI to Alert States About Local Election System Hacks

FBI to Alert States About Local Election System Hacks

The Federal Bureau of Investigation announced Thursday it will begin informing state election officials when local election systems are hacked, a policy change intended to improve cybersecurity coordination and address concerns state leaders have raised about transparency.


More than 8,000 jurisdictions run elections in the United States, but state election officials often have a role in certifying election results. In the past, when the FBI has gotten involved in a local election system breach, it has not automatically reported its findings to state-level officials. But because of the dual role that state and local officials play in overseeing elections, the FBI said it will now report cyber intrusions to both levels of government.


The bureau was criticized in the wake of the 2016 presidential election, after it was disclosed that Russian military intelligence had infiltrated the election systems of two Florida counties. State officials said they didn’t know anything about the hacks. Gov. Ron DeSantis was later briefed on the matter, but not allowed to disclose which counties were affected.


The new FBI policy requires disclosures about cyber intrusions to be made to both state and local election officials as soon as possible and preferably in person, according to senior FBI and Department of Justice officials who briefed reporters on the policy change.


“When we think of who the victim is, there is a politically accountable official somewhere in that state who is going to have to sign off on certifying those results,” said a senior DOJ official, speaking on background about the new policy. “That person n ..

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