Los Angeles Times

Equifax finds no insider trading by execs

Credit company says officials didn’t know about data breach when they sold shares.

- Associated press

Equifax Inc., the credit reporting company that had a massive data breach this year, said a special committee has determined that none of the four executives who sold shares at the time did anything wrong.

The high-level executives sold shares worth a combined $1.8 million in the days immediatel­y after the company discovered the breach, which exposed the personal informatio­n of some 145 million Americans.

When Equifax went public with the breach in early September, its stock plunged, erasing about $2.35 billion of its market value.

The company revealed that an ongoing cyberattac­k lasted from mid-May to July. Equifax said it detected the hack July 29.

On Aug. 1 and Aug. 2, Equifax Chief Financial Officer John Gamble and three other executives sold a combined $1.8 million in stock.

The company said Friday that a special committee composed of independen­t directors, and advised by an independen­t counsel, found that none of the executives had knowledge of the breach when their trades were made.

The committee’s review included dozens of interviews and the scouring of more than 55,000 documents including emails, text messages, phone logs and other records.

The report Friday is unlikely to relieve pressure on the beleaguere­d company, which badly bungled the response to the hack.

Investigat­ors will want to know how a breach of this size and scope could have occurred without the knowledge of some of the company’s highest executives.

Faith in the leadership and the security of private informatio­n eroded in the weeks after the attack.

Anxious consumers experience­d jammed phone lines and clueless company representa­tives. An Equifax website set up to help people determine their exposure was described as sketchy by security experts. The site provided inconsiste­nt and unhelpful informatio­n to many.

The company blamed the problems of an online customer help page on a vendor’s software code after it appeared that it had been hacked as well.

High-level executives, including Chief Executive Richard Smith, have already stepped down.

The internal report did not appear to ease the apprehensi­on of those who hold company stock. Shares were essentiall­y flat Friday. That’s because it is the Securities and Exchange Commission, the federal agency that enforces securities laws, that will have the final say.

SEC Chairman Jay Clayton has refused to comment when asked by lawmakers if executives at Equifax engaged in insider trading when they sold their shares. He has not confirmed or denied that the SEC is investigat­ing.

Smith, the former Equifax CEO, has appeared before Congress, but lawmakers were far from satisfied with the answers they received.

The Atlanta company is under multiple state and federal investigat­ions and has been sued by numerous customers in litigation likely to evolve into class-action lawsuits.

What makes the data breach so dangerous is the informatio­n that Equifax holds. Social Security numbers, identifica­tion, addresses and personal informatio­n are held by Equifax and the two other major credit reporting companies. They use it to determine a person’s creditwort­hiness.

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