The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Homeland Security cleared in alleged Ga. election probing

Inspector general finds no malicious intent in attempts.

- By Kristina Torres ktorres@ajc.com

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general has completed a report indicating there was no malicious intent last year when Secretary of State Brian Kemp alleged that the federal agency may have tried to hack into Georgia’s voter registrati­on system. The finding came after Georgia U.S. Rep. Jody Hice and Utah U.S. Rep. Jason Chaffetz, the chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Commit- tee, requested an independen­t review of the incident.

Hice and Chaffetz, who will be leaving Congress on Friday, made the request after Kemp said the agency had not been completely forthcomin­g about what happened.

Kemp said in December that security scans had found several attempted intrusions that the state’s cybersecur­ity experts flagged as suspicious. Homeland Security officials at the time said a federal con- tractor based in Georgia used an agency computer to do routine background checks of job applicants.

The incident occurred at a time of heightened security concerns about the nation’s patchwork of election sys- tems, as Homeland Secu- rity officials warned of hack- ers possibly targeting voter registrati­on systems in more than 20 states before the presidenti­al election. State officials as recently as this month said Georgia was not

among the states affected by those attempts.

Kemp has been at odds with Homeland Security over other issues, includ- ing then-Secretary Jeh John- son’s decision earlier this year to designate U.S. election systems as critical infrastruc­ture.

Kemp said in a statement Monday that he is satisfied with the review and the

inspector general’s finding. “Earlier today, I personally spoke with current DHS Secretary John Kelly and learned that the investigat­ion is now complete,” Kemp said. “DHS did not knowingly attempt to breach Georgia’s firewall or hack our systems. Federal officials were able to re-create the event, and they have promised to provide a detailed report for my review.

“While I am disappoint­ed that it took a new administra­tion to investigat­e this

highly important incident,

I am pleased to learn this informatio­n and relieved

that our federal government is not trying to interfere with elections in our state or others involved in this situation,” Kemp said.

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