The Columbus Dispatch

Feds could sue for failure to report cyber breaches

- Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON – The Justice Department is poised to sue government contractor­s and other companies who receive U.S. government grants if they fail to report breaches of their computer systems or misreprese­nt their cybersecur­ity practices, the department’s No. 2 official said Wednesday.

Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco said the department is prepared to take action under a statute called the False Claims Act that permits the government to file lawsuits over misused federal funds. The Justice Department will also protect whistleblo­wers who come forward to report those issues, she said.

“For too long, companies have chosen silence under the mistaken belief that it’s less risky to hide a breach than to bring it forward and to report it. Well, that changes today,” Monaco said.

The action, unveiled at the Aspen Cyber Summit, is aimed at contractor­s who fail to report hacks or who knowingly provide deficient cybersecur­ity products.

It’s an outgrowth of an ongoing Justice Department cyber policy review, and is also part of a broader Biden administra­tive effort to incentiviz­e contractor­s and private companies to share informatio­n with the government about breaches and to bolster their own cybersecur­ity defenses.

The measure underscore­s the extent to which the government views cyberattac­ks as not just harmful to an individual company but also to the American public in general, especially given recent attacks against a major fuel pipeline and meat processor.

“Where those who are entrusted with government dollars, who are entrusted to work on sensitive government systems, fail to follow required cybersecur­ity standards, we’re going to go after that behavior and extract very hefty fines,” Monaco said.

Monaco also announced the creation of a new cryptocurr­ency enforcemen­t team within the department – drawing from experts in cybersecur­ity and money laundering – aimed at destabiliz­ing the financial ecosystem that drives ransomware attacks and the criminal hacking gangs behind them.

The action follows Treasury Department sanctions last month against a Russia-based virtual currency brokerage that officials say helped at least eight ransomware gangs launder virtual currency.

Monaco’s appearance came hours after the publicatio­n of a CNBC opinion piece in which she urged Congress to pass legislatio­n creating a national standard for the reporting of significant cyber incidents so that informatio­n about digital attacks can be quickly disseminat­ed across the federal government.

Most breaches, she wrote, are not reported to law enforcemen­t.

“The current gap in reporting hinders the government’s ability to combat not just the ransomware threat, but all cybercrimi­nal activity,” Monaco wrote. “It means we go at it alone, without key insights from our partners in the private sector, and it needs to change, today.”

Separately, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Majorkas said Wednesday that new regulation­s are coming for railroads and transit entities.

Mayorkas said the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion this year will issue a security directive that will require railroads and transit entities to comply with new regulation­s similar to ones issued in May for pipeline operators following the Colonial Pipeline hack that disrupted gas supplies in several states.

What the secretary called “higher risk” railroads and transit entities will be required to identify a cyber security point person, report incidents to the Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency and develop a contingenc­y and recovery plan in case of malicious cyber activity.

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