Dayton Daily News

States react to attempted hack report

- By Emery P. Dalesio and Geoff Mulvihill

Officials in RALEIGH, N.C. — some states are trying to figure out whether local election offices were targeted in an apparent effort by Russian military intelligen­ce to hack into election software last fall.

The efforts were detailed in a recently leaked report attributed to the U.S. National Security Agency.

North Carolina is checking on whether any local systems were breached, while the revelation prompted an election security review in Virginia. Both are considered presidenti­al battlegrou­nd states.

In Illinois, officials are trying to determine which election offices used soft- ware from the contractor that the report said was com- promised.

The three are among eight states where election offices had contracts with VR Sys- tems, a Florida-based company that provided software to manage voter registra- tions. The others are Flor- ida, California, Indiana, New York and West Virginia.

The report, dated last month, asserts that hack- ers obtained informatio­n from company employees and used that to send phishing emails to 122 local elec- tion officials just before the election last November in an attempt to break into their systems.

So far, there is no indication that voting or ballot counting in any states were affected. Officials in at least five counties in Florida — a key political swing state — received the emails, the Miami Herald reported. It’s not clear where else the emails may have been sent.

But the revelation, published by the online news outlet The Intercept, set off questions in the states where VR provides software.

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