Orlando Sentinel

Equifax is now saying

Former executive is set to apologize Tuesday before a House committee

- Staff and wire report Jim Puzzangher­a of the Los Angeles Times and Associated Press contribute­d.

an additional 2.5 million Americans may have been affected by a massive security breach this summer, bringing the total to 145.5 million people.

NEW YORK — Credit report company Equifax is now saying an additional 2.5 million Americans may have been affected by a massive security breach this summer, bringing the total to 145.5 million people.

Equifax said the company it hired to do an examinatio­n of the breach, Mandiant, has concluded its in- vestigatio­n and plans to release the results “promptly.”

The update comes as Equifax’s former CEO, Richard Smith, will testify in front of Congress starting Tuesday. He plans to apologize for the credit reporting company’s massive data breach when he testifies before a congressio­nal committee, as well as detail the missteps in response to the hack that exposed Social Security numbers and birthdates.

“Equifax was entrusted with Americans’ private data and we let them down,” Richard Smith said in written testimony for the hearing that the House Energy and Commerce Committee released Monday. “To each and every person affected by this breach, I am deeply sorry that this occurred.”

Smith stepped down last week in the wake of the breach, which has sparked numerous federal and state investigat­ions as well as outrage from lawmakers.

His appearance Tuesday before the House panel will be the first of three before congressio­nal committees this week.

In his written testimony, Smith blamed the breach on “human error and technology failures” and said the company was a victim of “a massive theft.”

“The company failed to prevent sensitive informatio­n from falling into the hands of wrongdoers,” he said.

“The people affected by this are not numbers in a database. They are my friends, my family, members of my church, the members of my community, my neighbors,” Smith said. “This breach has impacted all of them. It has impacted all of us.”

Smith also said Equifax was “disappoint­ed” with the rollout of a special website and call centers to deal with the fallout from the breach. The company “struggled with the initial effort” to help consumers, he said.

Equifax has been criticized for waiting nearly six weeks to notify the public after learning of the hack July 29, and then initially making consumers give up their right to sue if they wanted free credit monitoring and identity theft protection. Equifax later backtracke­d on that requiremen­t.

On Aug. 1, three Equifax executives sold thousands of shares of stock. All the shares sold for about $146 each. The company’s stock sharply declined after the data breach was announced. Shares of Equifax closed Monday at $107.81, up $1.82 or 1.72 percent in trading on the NYSE.

Equifax’s board of directors has formed a special committee and is “conducting a thorough review of the trading at issue,” Theodore M. Hester, an attorney retained by Equifax, said in a letter Friday to Democrats on the House Energy and Commerce Committee.

“Equifax takes these matters seriously,” Hester wrote.

The stock sales were among several questions about the data breach that the lawmakers had asked Smith about in a Sept. 12 letter.

Smith said the data breach problems started March 8 when the Department of Homeland Security’s Computer Emergency Readiness Team sent a notice to Equifax and other companies about the need to patch a vulnerabil­ity in software known as Apache Struts.

Equifax sent emails about the federal warning to workers responsibl­e for the software, which is used in the company’s consumer online disputes portal. But the “vulnerable versions” of the software were not identified or patched, Smith said.

“Equifax’s efforts undertaken in March 2017 did not identify any versions of Apache Struts that were subject to this vulnerabil­ity, and the vulnerabil­ity remained in an Equifax web applicatio­n much longer than it should have,” Smith said. The company is investigat­ing why.

Hackers appear to have first used the software vulnerabil­ity to access sensitive informatio­n May 13 and continued to do so for weeks before Equifax’s security team identified suspicious network traffic July 29.

The next day, Equifax took the web portal offline.

Smith said he learned about the problem July 31 from the company’s chief informatio­n officer. A full response began Aug. 2.

 ?? MIKE STEWART/AP 2012 ?? Equifax has been criticized for waiting to notify the public after learning of the hack.
MIKE STEWART/AP 2012 Equifax has been criticized for waiting to notify the public after learning of the hack.
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