Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Texans’ driver’s licenses sent to internatio­nal crime group

- LAUREN MCGAUGHY AND ALLIE MORRIS

AUSTIN, Texas — The state shipped thousands of Texas driver’s licenses to an internatio­nal organized crime group in a security lapse that is still under investigat­ion, Department of Public Safety Chief Steve McCraw said Monday.

The Department of Public Safety has identified at least 3,000 Texans who have been affected and is investigat­ing more potential cases, department officials told House budget writers during a hearing Monday.

Texans of Asian descent were targeted by what McCraw described as “a Chinese organized crime group based in New York working in a number of different states.”

“We’re not happy at all,” he told the lawmakers. “Controls should have been in place, and this should have never happened.”

The agency is working with federal agencies, McCraw said, and the investigat­ion spans at least four states.

Other states have also been similarly targeted. It is not clear when the investigat­ion will be completed.

No state systems were hacked, officials said. Instead, the criminal actors were able to fraudulent­ly obtain the licenses in a scheme McCraw described this way: Personal data about Texans of Asian descent was obtained on the dark web, including credit card and personal informatio­n, and then used to request replacemen­t driver’s licenses from the state using the data. The group specifical­ly targeted Asians of various background­s with the hopes of finding “look-alikes” to match with Chinese nationals here in the country illegally, he said.

McCraw did not identify the criminal organizati­on by name.

While DPS issues licenses, they are ordered through a portal operated by a separate agency, the Texas Department of Informatio­n Resources.

At least 4,000 fraudulent accounts were created, and 2,400 licenses were shipped to “third-party addresses,” according to a letter from DPS notifying legislator­s of the problem.

DPS first learned about the problem at the end of last year but had not yet notified affected Texans because they have been working on the criminal investigat­ion and apprehendi­ng those responsibl­e, McCraw said, some of whom he said have been arrested.

The decision drew criticism from state Rep. Mary Gonzalez, who pointed out that thousands of Texans could have been impersonat­ed for months without their knowledge.

“The number one thing we have as a government agency, as government folks, is trust. And when we lose that trust by not thinking through, it’s difficult to rebuild that trust with the people,” the El Paso Democrat said, adding that the agency needed to be shepherdin­g affected Texans through ensuring their identities are protected.

Rep. Mano DeAyala, R-Houston, raised concerns about how the driver licenses from Texas could be used to get IDs from other states.

“We don’t want to be that weak link,” he said.

Jeoff Williams, DPS deputy director of law enforcemen­t services, told lawmakers the bad actors did not breach the state’s system but rather exploited existing security vulnerabil­ities in the online portal.

Texans looking to log into the license system had to provide an audit number on their driver license or answer a series of questions about themselves, such as previous addresses or their mother’s maiden name. The bad actors were able to find those personal details on the dark web to gain access to Texans’ accounts, Williams said.

In order to pay for the replacemen­t, the system only required a credit card number, but not the billing zip code or the three-digit code on the back on the card, known as a CVV, he added. Williams said the department asked the Department of Informatio­n Resources and the agency’s vendor to address those issues.

“We’ve eliminated some of those vulnerabil­ities by doing those things,” Williams said.

In a statement, DIR reiterated no state systems were hacked, and this was a “case of fraudulent criminal activity based on factors unrelated to state systems, not a cybersecur­ity incident.”

DIR oversees the state’s online infrastruc­ture, but state agencies set the security features on their individual applicatio­ns hosted by Texas. gov, spokespers­on Brittney Booth Paylor said in a written statement.

After this incident, Paylor said DIR now requires credit card features like CVV or zip code authentica­tion for all transactio­ns.

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