The Mercury News Weekend

Congress wants Capital One, Amazon to explain what happened in data breach

Legislatio­n for new data safeguards under considerat­ion

- By Matthew Daly Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Leaders of House and Senate committees want Capital One and Amazon to explain to Congress how a hacker accessed personal informatio­n from more than 100 million Capital One credit card customers and applicants.

The incident was the latest massive data breach at a large company.

Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan, the top Republican on the House Oversight and Reform Committee, asked for a staff-level briefing by Aug. 15 on the breach that was reported late Monday.

The chairman of the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee also said the committee will look into the matter. Sen. Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, plans legislatio­n that would establish new data safeguards for consumers.

“I have concerns about all aspects of this,” Crapo told reporters this week. “We want to understand how this happened, how other breaches happened ... and we want to know how vulnerabil­ities (appear) in systems and figure out what we must do to deal with them at a policy level.”

The head of the House Financial Services Committee, Rep. Maxine Waters, D- Calif., has also organized a briefing from Capital One for Democratic and Republican staff members, according to congressio­nal aides.

“As this is not the first incident in which Capital One’s customer data was exposed, we need to understand what bank regulators have been doing to ensure that this bank and other banks have strong cybersecur­ity policies and practices,” Waters said. She plans legislatio­n to improve oversight of the cybersecur­ity of financial institutio­ns.

In a letter Thursday to Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, Jordan and other Republican­s on the House Oversight panel note that Capital One data was stored on a cloud service provided by Amazon Web Services. The suspected hacker , Paige Thompson, is a former Amazon software engineer.

FBI agents arrested

Thompson on Monday for allegedly obtaining personal informatio­n from more than 100 million Capital One credit applicatio­ns, including roughly 140,000 Social Security numbers and 80,000 bank account numbers. There is no evidence the data was sold or distribute­d to others.

Rep. Elijah Cummings, chairman of the House Oversight and Reform Committee, said the committee has a long and bipartisan history of investigat­ing data breaches in the government and private sector. Cummings, D-Md., said he looks forward to hearing more informatio­n about the data breach from Capital One and the company’s response.

A spokesman for McLean, Virginia-based Capital One said in a statement that the

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