New York Post

HEAT ON THE HACKED

NY presses Equifax

- By KAREN FREIFELD and JOHN MCCRANK

New York state’s financial-services regulator has issued a subpoena to Equifax demanding it provide more informatio­n about the massive data breach the credit-reporting firm disclosed this month, a person familiar with the matter said on Wednesday.

New York’s Department of Financial Services sent the subpoena to Equifax on Sept. 14, said the person, who declined to be named because the matter has not been made public.

The subpoena seeks documents related to the hack that compromise­d the personal data of up to 143 million Americans, and details on when Equifax learned of the breach and what actions it took after it was discovered, as well as other informatio­n, the person said.

The DFS put out guidance to financial institutio­ns on Sept. 18 about steps they should take to protect consumer informatio­n following the breach, but the issuing of the subpoena has not been reported.

A spokesman for DFS declined to comment. An Equifax spokesman was not immediatel­y available.

The state also proposed on Sept. 18 credit-reporting agencies be subject to its cybersecur­ity rule that went into effect on March 1 and requires banks and other financial institutio­ns regulated by DFS to establish a program to protect con- sumer data and alert the regulator to material breaches.

Had Equifax already been subject to the regulation, it would have had to report the breach within 72 hours of its discovery, rather than the 41 days the company took after finding out that consumers’ Social Security numbers, birth dates, addresses and other sensitive informatio­n were compromise­d.

Equifax has lost around $4.5 billion in market value since it disclosed the hack on Sept. 7, which the Atlanta-based company said it detected on July 29 and occurred between mid-May and July.

Multiple federal and state agencies are investigat­ing the issue, including the US Department of Justice, which has launched a criminal probe.

The fallout continued on Tuesday, with Equifax announcing Chief Executive Richard Smith would leave the company and forgo his 2017 bonus.

Smith, whose departure followed the exit of Equifax’s chief informatio­n officer and chief security officer earlier this month, is expected to testify next week at congressio­nal hearings over the hack.

Three Equifax execs, including the chief financial officer, also are under fire for selling $1.8 million in stock three days after the company said it detected the breach. Equifax said the executives were unaware of the breach at the time.

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