Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cyber disruption persists in county

- THOMAS SACCENTE

VAN BUREN — The Crawford County government is still unable to provide certain services after getting hit by a malware attack over the Christmas holidays.

County Judge Dennis Gilstrap said Tuesday ransomware of unknown origin struck the county’s servers Dec. 26. He said it could be two or three weeks before the county’s computer system is back online and completely recovered.

The FBI website defines ransomware as a kind of malicious software preventing access to computer files, systems or networks and demands a ransom in exchange for their return.

Gilstrap said Crawford County hasn’t paid a ransom. The county’s informatio­n technology provider, the Rogers-based Apprentice Informatio­n Systems, shut down everything as soon as the county realized it had been hit by a cyberattac­k. This included all of the county’s servers and computers.

“And so it’s just kind of been a method of discovery as they go in and bring back up to see what informatio­n may have been lost or compromise­d,” Gilstrap said. “To this point, we did lose some of the files on the individual computers.”

Gilstrap attributed the amount of time it’s been taking to address this issue to Apprentice needing to “reimage” the county’s computers. He estimated the number of these computers to be about 200 and said they were hit at different levels.

However, Gilstrap said most of the files lost weren’t vital and not backed up on the computer system.

“Which informatio­n we keep on those computers is pretty much public informatio­n with the exception of employee serial numbers, Social Security numbers, that type of thing, and we don’t feel like any of that was compromise­d,” Gilstrap said.

Apprentice’s policy isn’t to comment on ongoing issues such as this, according to the county judge’s office.

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