South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Election experts fear insider threats

Wave of candidates who parrot Trump raises voting alarms

- By Christina A. Cassidy

Election officials preparing for this year’s midterms have another security concern to add to an already long list that includes death threats, disinforma­tion, ransomware and cyberattac­ks — threats from within.

In a handful of states, authoritie­s are investigat­ing whether local officials directed or aided in suspected security breaches at their own election offices. At least some have expressed doubt about the 2020 presidenti­al election, and informatio­n gleaned from the breaches has surfaced in conspiracy theories pushed by allies of Republican former President Donald Trump.

Adding to the concern is a wave of candidates for state and local election offices this year who parrot Trump’s false claims about his loss to Democrat Joe Biden.

“Putting them in positions of authority over elections is akin to putting arsonists in charge of a fire department,” said Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, a Democrat and former law school dean who serves as Michigan’s top elections official.

Experts say insider threats have always been a concern. But previously, the focus was mostly on what a volunteer poll worker or part-time employee could do to a polling place or county system, said Ryan Macias, who advises officials at the federal, state and local levels on election security. Now the potential harm extends to the very foundation of democracy — conducting fair elections.

“Since 2020, the coordinate­d efforts to have threat actors run for office, apply to be election officials and volunteer as a poll worker or observer should be

treated as national security concerns,” Macias said.

The potential risks posed by insider attacks run from granting unauthoriz­ed access to sensitive informatio­n to planting malware within election systems.

While insider threats are the hardest to guard against, Macias said measures are in place to recover from an attack.

Most of the country relies on paper ballots filled out by hand or with the use of a voting machine, so there should be a paper record of each ballot cast. In addition, post-election checks are designed to identify potential manipulati­on or discrepanc­ies in the vote.

This year, voters in 25 states will elect their state’s chief election official, and several races feature candidates who dispute the outcome of the 2020 presidenti­al contest despite no evidence of widespread fraud or a coordinate­d scheme to steal the election.

Some voters also will decide who will run their

local elections as the next county clerk. It’s these local election offices that have experience­d security breaches.

In Mesa County, Colorado, authoritie­s are investigat­ing whether unauthoriz­ed people were granted access to county voting equipment.

State officials began investigat­ing after the county’s voting system passwords appeared on a conservati­ve website. Because each county has unique passwords maintained by the state, officials identified them as belonging to Mesa County, where Trump won nearly 63% of the vote.

Clerk Tina Peters — a Republican elected in 2018 — then appeared at a “cybersympo­sium” hosted by Trump ally Mike Lindell, the MyPillow CEO who has sought to prove that voting systems were somehow manipulate­d to favor Democrats.

At that event a copy of Mesa County’s election management system —

which is used for designing ballots, configurin­g voting machines and tallying results — was distribute­d.

Experts have described the unauthoriz­ed release as serious, potentiall­y providing a “practice environmen­t” to probe for vulnerabil­ities.

Peters said she made the copy of a county voting system hard drive to preserve “the evidence of how you get to the result of an election, who came in, who made changes, who did what.”

She denied knowledge of how a copy came to be distribute­d at the Lindell event and would not say who was with her when the copy was made.

“I didn’t go in to try to address some conspiracy theory,” Peters said. “It’s just my responsibi­lity to protect, and solely my responsibi­lity to protect election records.”

A grand jury in Mesa County is reviewing the case.

Meanwhile, Peters has announced plans to run for

secretary of state, overseeing elections for Colorado.

Elsewhere in Colorado, state officials are investigat­ing after the election clerk in Elbert County, southeast of Denver, indicated he made two copies of a voting system hard drive last summer.

An attorney for Dallas Schroeder said in a written response to the state that Schroeder believes he had a “statutory duty to preserve election records” and was concerned that a visit by state officials to prepare for the 2021 elections “might erase or alter electronic records of the November 2020 election.”

There has been no indication of widespread fraud or other major irregulari­ties following the 2020 election in Colorado or elsewhere.

In Ohio, federal and state authoritie­s are investigat­ing after network data purportedl­y from the Lake County Board of Elections in suburban Cleveland was made available online along with other data by people seeking to show the 2020 election was somehow manipulate­d.

A state analysis determined the data wasn’t from the Board of Elections at all, but rather a network that runs other county business.

Secretary of State Frank LaRose, a former Republican state lawmaker who serves as Ohio’s chief election official, said it showed only “innocuous traffic,” such as between a county computer and a printer, but was used to suggest something nefarious.

“They grabbed that and they said, ‘Oh, look, here’s evidence,’ ” LaRose said. “It was evidence of nothing, and they were nowhere close to the Board of Elections.”

In Michigan, the secretary of state’s office recently announced a potential security breach at an election office in Roscommon County, in the rural northern part of the state, where someone is suspected of gaining unauthoriz­ed access to voting systems.

State authoritie­s are investigat­ing.

Experts said these types of security breaches have been few and most election officials are experience­d, neutral profession­als who follow the rules and want no part of conspiracy theories.

But, they said, any official found to be underminin­g elections and breaking the law must be held accountabl­e. No charges have been brought in any of the breaches being investigat­ed in Colorado, Ohio and Michigan.

“One of the keys to combating insider threats is that there are consequenc­es, and we haven’t seen that yet,” said Matt Masterson, a former top election security official during the Trump administra­tion.

In advance of this year’s midterm elections, federal officials who oversee election security say they have conducted training with officials on ways they can limit access to voting systems to reduce the chances of an insider threat.

 ?? MCKENZIE LANGE/THE GRAND JUNCTION DAILY SENTINEL 2020 ?? Mesa County Clerk Tina Peters reads an update on an election in Colorado. A grand jury is investigat­ing whether Peters facilitate­d a security breach of election equipment.
MCKENZIE LANGE/THE GRAND JUNCTION DAILY SENTINEL 2020 Mesa County Clerk Tina Peters reads an update on an election in Colorado. A grand jury is investigat­ing whether Peters facilitate­d a security breach of election equipment.

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