CRA reveals massive breach
Former employee illegally accessed over 1,200 tax files
In what is reportedly the largest privacy breach in the Canada Revenue Agency’s history, an employee in Western Canada improperly accessed more than 1,200 records at a Prairie region tax office.
The CRA fired the employee involved, but it won’t disclose which of the Prairie region offices the breach occurred at due to “confidentiality considerations,” said spokesperson Marie Tichborne via an emailed statement.
The Prairie region consists of offices in Saskatoon, Regina, Winnipeg and locations in Alberta.
A security and internal affairs investigation into the incident was launched in March 2016, according to documents provided to The StarPhoenix following an Access to Information request. The documents did not reveal information about the employee who was responsible for the breach or the date the incident occurred.
The investigation found that a CRA employee looked at the accounts of 38 people in detail, as well as his or her own account. The employee also glanced at 1,264 accounts after using the search function, entering various surnames and postal codes.
The employee didn’t make changes to any of the accounts, but was able to see the names, contact information, social insurance numbers, income and deductions and employment information for the taxpayers.
The investigation also found that the “risk of injury” to the 1,264 accounts was low because the information was actually onscreen for only an estimated two seconds each.
Only the 38 taxpayers whose information was directly accessed were notified of the breach.
“However, it’s important to note that, with respect to the 1,264 accounts improperly accessed by a single CRA employee, these accounts were viewed for approximately two seconds per account,” wrote Tichborne.
“Therefore, out of the 1,264 taxpayers, none were notified of the breach,” she said in the written statement.
The CRA issued a statement, saying it takes the protection of Canadians’ tax information “very seriously.” It went on to say in the statement that CRA employees are required to review the agency’s Code of Integrity and Professional Conduct and confirm they have read it, on an annual basis.
The agency employs more than 40,000 people nationwide.
This past March, the agency said it implemented a new technology that monitors its employees’ access to taxpayer information and “will flag accesses that appear inconsistent with the employees’ assigned workloads or duties.”