Chattanooga Times Free Press

Review debunks accusation feds hacked Georgia election

- BY KATHLEEN FOODY

ATLANTA — Allegation­s that the federal government tried to hack Georgia’s election systems were unfounded, according to a letter the Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general sent Monday to Congress.

The conclusion comes more than six months after Georgia’s Republican Secretary of State Brian Kemp accused the department of attempting to “breach our firewall” a week after the November presidenti­al election.

The letter said investigat­ors with the inspector general’s Digital Forensics and Analysis Unit reviewed computer data from the federal agency and Kemp’s office and also interviewe­d a contractor. They also recreated the contractor’s actions. The data, Roth wrote, confirmed the contractor’s statements that on Nov. 15 he used a public page on Kemp’s website to verify security guards’ weapons certificat­ion licensing, which he then copied into a spreadshee­t.

“Based on this work, we did not substantia­te the allegation­s that DHS attempted to scan or infiltrate the Georgia computer networks,” the agency’s inspector general John Roth wrote in the letter. “Rather, the evidence demonstrat­ed normal and appropriat­e use of Georgia’s public website.”

Kemp, a Republican, previously described that event as a “large unblocked scan” and an “attempt to breach our system.” The other nine incidents Kemp’s office questioned were also “normal and appropriat­e” use of the state’s public website and none involved web pages on elections or voters, the letter said.

Georgia was one of two states to decline federal help to secure election systems before the presidenti­al election amid concerns before and after the November elections. Kemp, who has launched a campaign for governor ahead of 2018, built a national profile on the issue and argued the federal government had no role in states’ election administra­tion.

In a statement Monday, Kemp said he spoke with Secretary of Homeland Security John Kelly and acknowledg­ed “DHS did not knowingly attempt to breach Georgia’s firewall or hack our systems.” But he continued to blast the agency’s leadership under former President Barack Obama and said former Secretary of Homeland Security Jeh Johnson “ignored” his requests for an investigat­ion.

“While I am disappoint­ed that it took a new administra­tion to investigat­e this highly important incident, I am pleased to learn this informatio­n and relieved that our federal government is not trying to interfere with elections in our state or others involved in this situation,” Kemp said.

Republican Rep. Jody Hice of Georgia requested the inspector general review in January along with former Republican Rep. Jason Chaffetz of Utah.

“Our nation operates best on a ‘trust, but verify’ system, and whenever allegation­s of abuse arise — be they cyberattac­ks, voter fraud, or voter suppressio­n — it is critically important to conduct a robust investigat­ion,” Hice said in a statement.

“Our nation operates best on a ‘trust, but verify’ system, and whenever allegation­s of abuse arise — be they cyberattac­ks, voter fraud, or voter suppressio­n — it is critically important to conduct a robust investigat­ion.”

— REPUBLICAN REP. JODY HICE OF GEORGIA

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Brian Kemp

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