The Star Malaysia

It is what the US court ordered

US court also orders Brochez to delete all data from S’pore ministry

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The 34-year-old American at the centre of a HIV registry leak, Mikhy Farrera Brochez, is ordered by a US court to immediatel­y hand over leaked data to Singapore’s Ministry of Health. He must also permanentl­y delete all sensitive or private informatio­n obtained from the Singapore authoritie­s by March 29.

WASHINGTON: A 34-year-old American at the centre of Singapore’s HIV registry leak was ordered by a United States court to immediatel­y hand over all copies he owned of any confidenti­al data from the Singapore government.

Mikhy Farrera Brochez must also permanentl­y delete all sensitive or private informatio­n obtained from the Singapore authoritie­s, whether it be saved on any computer or uploaded to any platform.

He has until March 29 to certify to the court that the deletions were made.

The order was part of a preliminar­y injunction sought by Singapore’s Ministry of Health (MOH), which filed a civil lawsuit against Brochez in February in a Kentucky federal court to limit his spread of the stolen data.

The data involved the confidenti­al informatio­n of 14,200 people with HIV, including their names, contact details and medical informatio­n.

Brochez had gained access to the HIV Registry through his Singaporea­n partner, who was head of the MOH’s National Public Health Unit.

Brochez was deported from Singapore in April last year after serving a jail term for separate drug-related offences and fraud, including lying to the Ministry of Manpower about his own HIV status, and now lives in the United States.

In the latest court order, he must also remove all online posts on all social media platforms which refer to the confidenti­al informatio­n or are related to the data leak, and is banned from making any further such posts.

Anyone else he sent the data to must also do the same.

Brochez is already barred from disclosing the confidenti­al informatio­n under a temporary restrainin­g order, but Monday’s injunction goes a step further in requiring the deletions and removal of informatio­n online.

US District Judge Danny Reeves said that Brochez was likely to continue in his efforts to spread the leaked informatio­n if the preliminar­y injunction was not granted.

“The defendant has indicated in a Facebook post that he feels ‘wronged’ by the Government of Singapore and has repeatedly threatened to disseminat­e the informatio­n if his husband is not released from custody,” said the judge in the written grounds for his decision.

Brochez’s partner, Ler Teck Siang, was convicted in 2016 of helping him give false informatio­n to the authoritie­s. He is appealing.

Brochez faces four federal criminal charges relating to the unlawful possession of identifica­tion documents and attempted extortion. His case is now before a grand jury, which will decide whether or not to proceed to a trial.

He was due in court on Monday over a separate criminal trespassin­g charge. The hearing was postponed to July because he is in detention until the federal criminal case is concluded.

 ?? — The Straits Times/Asia News Network ?? Strict deadline: Brochez has until March 29 to certify to the court that he has permanentl­y deleted all sensitive informatio­n he obtained from the Singapore authoritie­s.
— The Straits Times/Asia News Network Strict deadline: Brochez has until March 29 to certify to the court that he has permanentl­y deleted all sensitive informatio­n he obtained from the Singapore authoritie­s.

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