Houston Chronicle

Hackers stole data on over 21 million

Officials acknowledg­e breach was much more extensive than disclosed

- By Jack Gillum and Josh Lederman

Federal officials reveal that 21.5 million people were swept up in a colossal breach of government computer systems that began last year and involved the theft of Social Security numbers.

WASHINGTON — Hackers stole Social Security numbers, health histories and other highly sensitive data from more than 21 million people, the Obama administra­tion said Thursday, acknowledg­ing that the breach of U.S. government computer systems was far more severe than previously disclosed.

The scope of the data breach — believed to be the biggest in U.S. history — has grown dramatical­ly since the government first disclosed earlier this year that hackers had gotten into the Office of Personnel Management’s personnel database and stolen records for about 4.2 million people.

Since then, the Obama administra­tion has acknowledg­ed a second, related breach of the systems housing private data that individual­s submit during background investigat­ions to obtain security clearances.

Background data taken

That second attack affected more than 19 million people who applied for clearances, as well as nearly 2 million of their spouses, housemates and others who never applied for security clearances, the administra­tion said. Among the data the hackers stole: criminal, financial, health, employment and residency histories, as well as informatio­n about their families and acquaintan­ces.

The new revelation­s drew indignatio­n from members of Congress who have said the administra­tion has not done enough to protect personal data in their systems, as well as calls for OPM Director Katherine Archuleta and her top deputies to resign. House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz, a Utah Republican, said Archuleta and her aides had “consciousl­y ignored the warnings and failed to correct these weaknesses.”

“Such incompeten­ce is inexcusabl­e,” Chaffetz said in a statement.

House Republican leaders — Speaker John Boehner, Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy and Whip Steve Scalise — also called for Archuleta’s resignatio­n and said President Barack Obama must “take a strong stand against incompeten­ce.”

Yet Archuleta insisted she will not step down.

“I am committed to the work that I am doing,” she said in a conference call with reporters.

Not placing blame yet

Archuleta said the hackers also obtained user names and passwords that prospectiv­e employees used to fill out their background investigat­ion forms, as well as the contents of interviews conducted as part of those investigat­ions.

Yet the government insisted there were no indication­s that the hackers have used the data they stole.

Still, the government declined to say who was behind the attack.

Numerous U.S. lawmakers, including Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid, have said China was behind the attack. But Michael Daniel, Obama’s cybersecur­ity coordinato­r, said the government wasn’t yet ready to say who was responsibl­e.

“Just because we’re not doing public attributio­n does not mean that we’re not taking steps to deal with the matter,” Daniel told reporters.

While officials would not point the finger at China, they acknowledg­ed that the same party was responsibl­e for both of the breaches, which took place in 2014 and early 2015. Investigat­ors previously said that the U.S. government was increasing­ly confident that China’s government, and not criminal hackers, was responsibl­e for the extraordin­ary theft of personal informatio­n.

China has publicly denied involvemen­t in the break-in.

The administra­tion said it has stepped up its cybersecur­ity efforts by proposing new legislatio­n, urging private industry to share more informatio­n about attacks and examining how the government conducts sensitive background investigat­ions.

Meanwhile, the White House waited about a month before telling the public that hackers had stolen the personal informatio­n of millions of people associated with the government, people directly involved with the investigat­ion said last month.

FBI Director James Comey, in a briefing Thursday, described the scope of the OPM breach as “huge” and called it “a very big deal from a national-security perspectiv­e and a counterint­elligence perspectiv­e.”

“It’s a treasure trove of informatio­n about everybody who has worked for, tried to work for, or works for the United States government,” he said.

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