Chattanooga Times Free Press

Nashville released personal info of residents

- BY JOEY GARRISON USA TODAY NETWORK-TENNESSEE

Metro Nashville recently publicized confidenti­al personal informatio­n — including Social Security numbers on arrest records — of an undisclose­d number of private citizens in a public informatio­n breach by the city’s government.

Davidson County Criminal Court Clerk Howard Gentry’s office said Monday that it is “taking action to review and remedy” the breach.

Metro officials say some criminal affidavits attached to publicly available arrest warrants inappropri­ately included the Social Security numbers and other informatio­n of private residents.

The city is offering one year of credit monitoring and identity theft protection service in response to the situation, Mayor David Briley’s administra­tion announced.

The website Scoop: Nashville first exposed the breach on Aug. 1, reporting that it affected victims, as well as people who had never been arrested, in addition to the accused.

“It is regrettabl­e this informatio­n was made publicly available, and it absolutely should not have happened,” Gentry, re-elected to his office this month, said in a statement. “We are looking into the scope of the breach, including the Metro agencies and individual­s involved, and will be relying on the services of a third-party vendor to help with the investigat­ion.

“Our preliminar­y review indicates that only a small

portion of the total affidavits contained confidenti­al identifyin­g informatio­n.”

Judith Byrd, a spokeswoma­n for Briley, said the city does not have an exact number of people affected.

But Criminal Court Chief Deputy Clerk Julius Sloss said around 5,400 affidavits have been identified that potentiall­y have a Social Security number or a driver’s license number. He said he doesn’t believe the final number will be that high because there are likely duplicates and outlier data such as false Social Security and driver’s license numbers.

In a news release issued by the mayor’s office, the city says it plans to notify those affected within 45 days that their confidenti­al informatio­n was disclosed. A third party will review breached informatio­n to identify people who have been affected.

According to Byrd, the Metro Police Department on July 31 issued a reminder to officers that Social Security numbers, bank account numbers and other sensitive personal informatio­n that could place someone at enhanced risk of identity theft should not be placed in arrest warrant affidavits.

Davidson County General Sessions Judge Melissa Blackburn issued an order on Aug. 7 that any arrest warrants including sensitive personal identifyin­g informatio­n be signed by a judicial commission­er.

The city says it intends to scrub confidenti­al personal identifyin­g informatio­n from all affidavits before being posted on the Criminal Court Clerk’s Office website, where those records are viewable.

Briley’s administra­tion also has promised “proactive steps” to ensure confidenti­al informatio­n does not appear on future affidavits.

The data breach involving criminal justice records is Metro’s second episode this year that has raised questions about the handling of sensitive personal informatio­n.

In June, the Tennessean reported that the identities of thousands of Tennessean­s with HIV or AIDS, both living and dead, were listed in a computer database kept on a server accessible to the entire staff of Nashville Metro Public Health.

Metro Health officials said they don’t believe the database was improperly opened during the nine months it was on a shared server.

Contact Joey Garrison at 615-259-8236 or jgarrison@tennessean.com.

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