The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Kemp ‘doing my job’ on hacking probe,

Democrats accuse GOP governor candidate of not being truthful.

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com Tamar Hallerman tamar.hallerman@ajc.com

Secretary of State Brian Kemp said Monday that he was not concerned about the optics of his office launching an investigat­ion into the Democratic Party of Georgia hours before voters head to the polls.

Meanwhile, the GBI said in a statement Monday that the Secretary of State’s Office requested an investigat­ion, and the bureau opened its own criminal investigat­ion into allegation­s of computer crimes.

The GOP candidate for governor said his office is handling its probe, which alleges that someone made a failed attempt to hack the state’s voter registrati­on system, just as it would any other cybersecur­ity investigat­ion.

Kemp’s office has not produced evidence implicatin­g the Democratic Party.

“I’m not worried about how it looks. I’m doing my job,” Kemp told reporters after a rally at the DeKalb-Peachtree Airport. “This is how we would handle any investigat­ion when something like

this comes up. Because I can assure you if I hadn’t done anything and the story came out that something was going on, you’d be going ‘Why didn’t you act?’ ”

The Republican insisted the state’s voting system is secure, even as the FBI, GBI and U.S. Department of Homeland Security have gotten involved in the investigat­ion.

The Secretary of State’s Office circulated a press release Sunday morning announcing it was investigat­ing the state Democratic Party to determine whether it had a part in an unsuccessf­ul attempt to penetrate the state’s registrati­on system the day before. Later Sunday, it requested an FBI investigat­ion of “possible cyber crimes,” but it offered no details or concrete evidence about the potential crimes committed.

Democrats have vehemently rejected the allegation­s and say Kemp is trying to cover up vulnerabil­ities that could expose voters’ personal informatio­n.

Democratic candidate for governor Stacey Abrams, following a morning rally at the longshorem­en’s hall in Savannah, accused Kemp of not being truthful about the hacking claims.

“He ignored the warnings; he then made up a lie,” she said. “And he’s now trying to stick to it because he knows that once again he’s proven that he is abusing his power as secretary of state and as a candidate for this office.”

Abrams described Kemp’s investigat­ion as a witch hunt.

“The whole notion of a witch hunt is that you’re looking for something that isn’t real, but you can’t prove that it’s not real because it never existed,” she said. “There was never a hack. There was never a problem on the side of the Democratic Party. What was wrong is that he failed to do his job. He is abusing his power.”

Kemp would not comment on the specifics of the probe beyond stating that he immediatel­y contacted state and federal investigat­ors.

“The system is secure and we’re asking them to look into it,” he said.

Abrams said that Democrats had discovered a flaw in the voting system that allowed personal informatio­n to be exposed, although there is no evidence any private informatio­n was ever leaked.

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