Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Georgia election hacking alleged

Democrats slam Kemp probe

- AVI SELK, VANESSA WILLIAMS AND AMY GARDNER

Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp on Sunday announced an investigat­ion into the state’s Democrats over a “failed attempt to hack the state’s voter-registrati­on system” — an extraordin­ary claim made two days before an election in which he is running against Democrat Stacey Abrams to become governor.

But voters-rights groups pushed back within hours of the announceme­nt, suggesting the investigat­ion was a political distractio­n after Democratic officials, among others, alerted authoritie­s over the weekend to security vulnerabil­ities in the voting system Kemp oversees.

The secretary of state’s office, which Democrats have accused throughout Kemp’s campaign of manipulati­ng the electoral system for his benefit, announced the investigat­ion Sunday morning with an all-caps headline that appeared directly below a voters’ guide on a government website:

“After failed hacking attempt, SOS launches investigat­ion into Georgia Democratic Party.”

The attached statement contained no evidence and almost no details on the Democratic Party of Georgia’s “possible cyber crimes,” but said Kemp’s office had launched the investigat­ion Saturday evening and alerted the FBI and Department of Homeland Security.

By early Sunday afternoon, however, at least two voters-rights attorneys called foul on Kemp.

David Cross, a D.C. lawyer who represents voters suing Georgia over alleged vulnerabil­ities in its elections system, forwarded an email between himself and an FBI agent from Saturday, sent before Kemp’s office launched its investigat­ion. Cross tells the agent that a secretary of state website set up for voters to check their registrati­on status and find polling locations may be leaking confidenti­al voter informatio­n.

“Thanks!” the agent replies. “We’ll pass the informatio­n along to the Secretary of State’s Office for them to evaluate.”

A lawyer with another group, Coalition for Good Governance, told Who What Why that he alerted Kemp’s lawyers to similar issues on Saturday. The outlet reported that the Democratic Party of Georgia had also been in contact with election security experts about the potential to hack the state’s systems.

“We alerted the authoritie­s. We expected Mr. Kemp to take action. We were surprised to see the apparent response to that was accusing [the Democrats] of hacking,” Cross said Sunday.

After those reports were publicized on Sunday, Kemp’s state office partially confirmed them in an update to its original statement on the failed “hack.”

“We opened an investigat­ion into the Democratic Party of Georgia after receiving informatio­n from our legal team about failed efforts to breach the online voter registrati­on system and My Voter Page,” reads the news statement. “We are working with our private sector vendors and investigat­ors to review data logs. We have contacted our federal partners and formally requested the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion to investigat­e these possible cyber crimes. The Secretary of State’s office will release more informatio­n as it becomes available.”

The investigat­ion was immediatel­y condemned as a political ploy by Democrats and some commentato­rs, who believe Kemp should not oversee an election in which he is competing.

“Brian Kemp’s scurrilous claims are 100 percent false, and this so-called investigat­ion was unknown to the Democratic Party of Georgia until a campaign operative in Kemp’s official office released a statement this morning,” Rebecca DeHart, executive director of the state Democratic Party, wrote in a statement. “This is yet another example of abuse of power by an unethical Secretary of State.”

Abrams, who is polling almost neck-and-neck with Kemp, told CNN on Sunday that she had been unaware of her opponent’s investigat­ion into her party.

“He is desperate to turn the conversati­on away from his failures, from his refusal to honor his commitment­s, and from the fact that he’s part of a nationwide system of voter suppressio­n,” she said.

Late Sunday, Kemp’s spokesman issued the following statement:

“In an act of desperatio­n, the Democrats tried to expose vulnerabil­ities in Georgia’s voter registrati­on system. This was a 4th quarter Hail Mary pass that was intercepte­d in the end zone. Thanks to the systems and protocols establishe­d by Secretary of State Brian Kemp, no personal informatio­n was breached. These power-hungry radicals should be held accountabl­e for their criminal behavior.”

Voting rights has become a major issue in the campaign, which has drawn national attention because Abrams, 44, if elected, would become the nation’s first black female governor.

Kemp, 55, also has been criticized for having purged more than a million voters from the rolls during the past year.

Although lawmakers and elections officials in Republican-controlled states have cited concerns about cheating to enact strict voter registrati­on and identifica­tion laws, there is no evidence of widespread fraud in the United States.

Kemp’s office came under intense scrutiny last month, when the Associated Press reported that more than 53,000 voter registrati­on applicatio­ns — 70 percent of them from blacks — had been held up because the identifica­tion informatio­n was not an “exact match” to other state records, because of discrepanc­ies such as a dropped hyphen in a person’s name.

On Friday a federal judge ordered the state to immediatel­y stop using the rule, saying it would likely lead to violating the voting rights of a large number of people.

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