Alleged hacker demands $10 mil for Va medical records
Published: May 4, 2009
State and federal authorities are investigating a possible extortion demand that seeks $10 million for the safe return of more than 8 million patient records and 35 million prescription records that allegedly were hacked last week from the Virginia Department of Health Professions computers.
An extortion note posted on WikiLeaks, a Web site that publishes anonymous submissions and leaks of sensitive government and corporate information, reads:
"ATTENTION VIRGINIA I have your [stuff]! In *my* possession, right now, are 8,257,378 patient records and a total of 35,548,087 prescriptions. Also, I made an encrypted backup and deleted the original. Unfortunately for Virginia, their backups seem to have gone missing, too. Uhoh :("
The note demands $10 million within seven days, but it does not say from what date the count began. Hackers apparently infiltrated the health professions' computers last Thursday.
M.A. Myers, a spokesman for the Richmond office of the FBI, confirmed late today that an investigation has begun but declined to provide specifics. He said the FBI received a referral from the Virginia Information Technologies Agency.
Corinne Geller, a state police spokeswoman, confirmed that state investigators are assisting the FBI.
Last Thursday afternoon, all 36 computer servers storing the state agency's records were shut down after a message popped up on some computers that made them believe the system was being hacked.
A redirected Web site today had a note at the top informing users that the department was experiencing technical difficulties. Most of the links to various divisions within the department did not work; phone numbers were listed to call for information.
The authenticity of the demand note was in question, but two sources familiar with the letter confirmed that it is being investigated, along with the disruption to the health professions' computer servers.
"I am aware of that information being out on the Internet," Health Professions Director Sandra Whitley Ryals said of the ransom note. "However, a criminal investigation is under way, so I am not able to speak to the details."
She added: "We take information security very seriously and are taking all the essential precautionary steps."
The ransom-note writer said if the money isn't paid in seven days, "I'll go ahead and put this baby out on the market and accept the highest bid."
If the prescription data can't be sold, the writer says, then "at the very least I can find a buyer for the personal data" -- which the note says includes names, ages, Social Security numbers and driver's license numbers.
The writer provided a Yahoo Mail address to contact.
The Virginia Department of Health Professions maintains licensing information on doctors, nurses and other health care practitioners in the state. Ryals said they were still able to license practitioners and investigate disciplinary cases.
Ryals said she did not know when the complete site will be up and running:
"We have folks who have been working literally around the clock since the system was shut down on Thursday."
Contact Mark Bowes at (804) 649-6450 or .
Contact Tammie Smith at (804) 649-6572 or .
Reader Reactions
This happened last Thursday nobody formally notified? Is there some kind of cover-up here? But most importantly, who is liable, VITA or NG. This is another example of why this marriage between VITA and NG is too political!!
If this information is “sold to the highest bidder,“ will the Commonwealth be responsible for paying to clean up the millions of cases of identity theft that result? Also, this article doesn’t mention it, but what about the blackmail potential from this type of information? Doctors can be blackmailed because they provided X drug to Patient A, but not to Patient B. Patients can be blackmailed if they don’t want their boss to find out they take OxyContin, Percocet, Lortab, Vicodin, Valium, Ritalin, Adderall, Xanax, Morphine, etc. How did a hacker even gain access to this type of information, when it should have been more securely guarded? Even most personal computers probably have better firewalls than this!
Remind me again why VITA (and Northrop Grumman) was such a great idea? Oh, and what about electronic medical records? Why not just publish my medical history in the RT-D?
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