The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Laptop, USB drives stolen from Philly election-staging site

- By Frank Bajak and Claudia Lauer

PHILADELPH­IA » Computer thumb drives used to program Philadelph­ia voting machines were stolen from a city warehouse along with the laptop of an employee from the machines’ manufactur­er.

The items were stolen from a warehouse in the city’s East Falls section, city election commission spokesman Nick Custodio said in a brief emailed statement, adding: “We are confident that this incident will not in any way compromise the integrity of the election.” The Philadelph­ia Inquirer, which first reported the theft in the majority Democratic city, said they were stolen this week.

The laptop did not hold any “sensitive election-related data” and was not used for election programmin­g, said spokeswoma­n Katina Granger, of Election Systems & Software of Omaha, Nebraska, the manufactur­er. She said ES&S immediatel­y cut it off from the vendor’s network upon learning of the theft.

Granger said she was not able to address specifics about the stolen USB drives, including how many were taken and what was on them. Custodio did not answer emailed questions, including whether any of the 3,750 Express Vote XL touchscree­n ballot-marking devices used by the city might have been affected.

Pennsylvan­ia is a crucial battlegrou­nd which Trump won by 44,000 votes in 2016, with Hillary Clinton winning Philadelph­ia by a 67% margin, or 475,000 votes.

Election security expert Eddie Perez of the nonpartisa­n OSET Institute said Philadelph­ia voters’ confidence in the integrity of the election demands on transparen­cy from officials that is so far lacking: “This is supposed to be a secured facility,” he said, “and apparently neither the county nor the election vendor adequately protected these sensitive assets. Why not?”

Granger of ES&S said the companies’ USB devices use multiple levels of encryption and are “married” to single voting machines during programmin­g. But Perez said that it’s so far unclear how far along Philadelph­ia was in programmin­g for the Nov. 3 election — and thus how much of a threat the theft might pose.

“It is very, very common that a USB stick has a wealth of informatio­n that is related not only to the configurat­ion of the election and its ballot — and the behavior of the voting device — but also internal system data used to validate the election,” said Perez. “In principle, someone possessing the informatio­n on one of these USBs could disrupt the opening and closing of the devices in polling places. They could disrupt how ballots are displayed on the screen and they could potentiall­y disrupt counting votes on those ballots.”

An “insider” bent on tampering with the election would only need to alter a subset of ballot marking devices to compromise voting, Perez said.

In an emailed statement, Mayor Jim Kenney said police were investigat­ing and “enhanced security” would be added at the warehouse. “This matter should not deter Philadelph­ians from voting, nor from having confidence in the security of this election.”

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