Chattanooga Times Free Press

Georgia attorney general quits defense in server wiping case

- BY FRANK BAJAK

The Georgia attorney general’s office will no longer represent the state’s top elections official in an elections integrity lawsuit filed three days before a crucial computer server was quietly wiped clean.

The lawsuit aims to force Georgia to retire its antiquated and heavily questioned touchscree­n election technology, which does not provide an auditable paper trail.

The server in question was a statewide staging location for key electionre­lated data. It made headlines in June after a security expert disclosed a gaping security hole that wasn’t fixed for six months after he first reported it to election authoritie­s. Personal data was exposed for Georgia’s 6.7 million voters, as were passwords used by county officials to access files.

The assistant state attorney general handling the case, Cristina Correia, notified the court and participat­ing attorneys Wednesday that her office was withdrawin­g from the case, according to an email obtained by The Associated Press. Spokeswoma­n Katelyn McCreary offered no explanatio­n and said she couldn’t comment “on pending matters.”

Secretary of State Brian Kemp, the main defendant, is running for governor in 2018 and his campaign said in a statement emailed to the AP that the attorney general’s office has a conflict of interest and cannot represent either Kemp’s office or the state elections board. It quoted campaign spokesman Ryan Mahoney, who did not elaborate and did not immediatel­y respond to AP emails and text messages seeking details.

The secretary of state’s office had said in an earlier statement the law firm of former Georgia Gov.

Roy Barnes would represent Kemp and other state election officials. It made no mention of a conflict of interest.

The campaign statement quoted Mahoney as saying: “There is no scandal or vast conspiracy. This is a tasteless nothingbur­ger cooked up by liberal activists who know their lawsuit is nothing short of stupid.”

Both Kemp and state Attorney General Chris

Carr are Republican­s. Barnes is a Democrat.

The server’s data was destroyed July 7 by technician­s at the Center for Elections Systems at Kennesaw State University, which runs the state’s election system, Correia informed attorneys in the case in an Oct. 18 email. Twelve days earlier, she had informed the same group of attorneys that the data on the server

was wiped on March 17, the same day it was returned to the Center for Elections Systems at Kennesaw State University by the FBI after a probe into the security incident. No one at the state attorney general’s office has explained Correia’s source for the apparently erroneous informatio­n on timing. The AP obtained both emails.

KSU email records obtained by the AP last week in an open records request say the server data was destroyed July 7.

The erased hard drives are central to the lawsuit because they could have revealed whether Georgia’s most recent elections were compromise­d by hackers. Russian interferen­ce in U.S. politics, including attempts to penetrate voting systems, has been an acute national preoccupat­ion since last year.

It’s not clear who ordered the server’s data irretrieva­bly erased.

Kemp has denied ordering the data destructio­n or knowing about it in advance. His office’s general counsel issued a two-page report Monday claiming Kennesaw State officials followed “standard IT practices” in wiping the server that “were not undertaken to delete evidence.” It said it first learned of the wiping of the main election server on Oct. 24, when the AP first asked about it.

In a public statement on the server wiping two

“There have been multiple conflictin­g stories of how and when the evidence on the servers was destroyed.”

— MARILYN MARKS, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF

THE COALITION FOR GOOD GOVERNANCE

days later, Kemp’s office decried KSU’s wiping of the server as reckless, inexcusabl­e and inept.

The report released Tuesday says “current indication­s are” the FBI retains an image of the server it made in March when it investigat­ed the security hole. The FBI has not responded to AP inquiries on whether it still has that image or has performed a forensic examinatio­n to determine whether data on the server might have been altered by hackers.

Executive Director Marilyn Marks of the Coalition for Good Governance, a plaintiff in the case, called the attorney general’s office’s withdrawal from the legal defense shocking but not unexpected.

She accused Kemp of hiding the facts of the case — perhaps even from the state attorney general’s office.

“There have been multiple conflictin­g stories of how and when the evidence on the servers was destroyed.”

 ?? DAVID ALEXANDER BARNES/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP, FILE ?? Chris Carr responds to a reporter’s question during a 2016 news conference in Atlanta where he was appointed the next attorney general following the Board of Regents vote to hire current Attorney General Sam Olens as president of Kennesaw State...
DAVID ALEXANDER BARNES/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP, FILE Chris Carr responds to a reporter’s question during a 2016 news conference in Atlanta where he was appointed the next attorney general following the Board of Regents vote to hire current Attorney General Sam Olens as president of Kennesaw State...
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp speaks at a 2011 news conference in Atlanta.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp speaks at a 2011 news conference in Atlanta.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States