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Government Crime United States

US Homeland Security Official Charged with Stealing Confidential Government Software, Databases (zdnet.com) 25

An anonymous reader quotes ZDNet: In a press release Friday, the U.S. Department of Justice charged a former Acting Inspector General for the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) with the theft of proprietary software and confidential government databases.

The indictment named Charles K. Edwards, a former DHS Acting Inspector General between 2011 to 2013, but also his former aid, 54-year-old Murali Yamazula Venkata. DOJ officials claim that between October 2014 and April 2017 -- after Edwards left office -- Edwards, Venkata, and others were part of a scheme that stole confidential and proprietary software from DHS Office of Inspector General (OIG). Edwards and others also stole sensitive government databases containing the personal identifying information (PII) of DHS and United States Postal Service (USPS) employees, the DOJ claims.

U.S. officials claim Edwards had set up his own company, named Delta Business Solutions, through which he wanted to sell an enhanced version of stolen DHS-OIG software to the OIG for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, at a profit... "Although Edwards had left DHS-OIG in December 2013, he continued to leverage his relationship with Venkata and other DHS-OIG employees to steal the software and the sensitive government databases," the DOJ said Friday in an announcement. According to court documents, Venkata, Edwards' former aid, along with others, assisted the former DHS AIG by reconfiguring his laptop so that he could properly upload the stolen software and databases.

In addition, the DOJ claims they also provided Edwards with technical and troubleshooting support and even helped the former DHS AIG build a testing server at his residence where he could test the stolen software and stolen government databases.

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US Homeland Security Official Charged with Stealing Confidential Government Software, Databases

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  • Would steal software and leak classified information
    • Would steal software and leak classified information

      I wish more would get caught.

      • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

        Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        The blatant disregard for law shown by those officials should be deeply disturbing. The basis for the reasoning that they would get away with so brazen a crime, is high level corruption routinely exposed and ignored like the Clintons and the Bidens, this is creating a society of corruption and is impacting the socio-economic fabric of the USA in a extremely destruct full way. Wars for profit, public kickbacks on bribes, scamming elections, broken military hardware, failing infrastructure, dysfunctional gove

        • When you were naming corrupt officials you seem to have left one out, a big orange one that currently has infinitely more power than Clinton and Biden combined. Why is that? Why leave a demonstrably corrupt official with a ton of power out of your list of enemies?
    • In legal terms there will be lots of 'accessories' and 'aiding and abetting' and those with DBA privileges who failed to spot the transfers. If true, this is breathtaking systemic failure of the highest magnitude. I hope every person involved goes under, and billed for their forensic costs. Visa once caught an outsourcer using live data - and all those involved went to hell. If big, 400 or so people should loose their jobs and or never promoted and no referee reports either. Destroying evidence is also a v
    • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

      Would steal software and leak classified information

      I wish you had a brain.

  • Gotta wonder, who'd he piss off?

  • by l0n3s0m3phr34k ( 2613107 ) on Sunday March 08, 2020 @07:23PM (#59809316)
    "Insider threat" is a section of DISA's Cyber Awareness Challenge. I'm curious how they actually got caught; if it was some DLP or just dumb luck.
  • The headline implies the DHS hasn't got the software and databases anymore.
    Which is clearly nonsense.

    What really happened, is that somebody leaked their secrets. (Implying he actually "told" it to third parties.)

    So can we please stop enabling the Content Mafia reality distortion, and get real? This kind of nonsense only enables criminals to steal from artists and fans. And it causes otherwise good people to delude themselves into idiotic business models that can't work, believing that they can control their

    • but somebody (an actual person) betrayed you and gave your secret to people you told him not to, which caused you harm

      Espionage?

  • Let's outlaw encryption. If you haven't done anything wrong you have nothing to hide. What a great idea...

If a thing's worth having, it's worth cheating for. -- W.C. Fields

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