Kansas officials blame 5-week disruption of court system on 'sophisticated foreign cyberattack'

FILE - This photo shows a computer terminal normally used by the public to access Kansas court records shut down, Oct. 25, 2023, at the Shawnee County Courthouse in Topeka, Kan. Cybercriminals hacked into the Kansas court system, stole sensitive data and threatened to post it on the dark web in a ransomware attack that has hobbled access to records for more than five weeks, officials said Tuesday, Nov. 21. (AP Photo/John Hanna, File) (John Hanna, Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

MISSION, Kan. ā€“ Cybercriminals hacked into the Kansas court system, stole sensitive data and threatened to post it on the dark web in a ransomware attack that has hobbled access to records for more than five weeks, officials said Tuesday.

The announcement of a ā€œsophisticated foreign cyberattackā€ was confirmation of what computer security experts suspected after the state's Judicial Branch said Oct. 12 that it was pausing electronic filings. Until now, state officials had released few details, describing it simply as a ā€œsecurity incident.ā€

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Upon learning about the attack, the state disconnected its court information system from external access and notified authorities, the Judicial Branch said in a statement. That disrupted daily operations of the stateā€™s appellate courts and all but one county. Johnson County, the stateā€™s most populous, operates its own computer systems and had not yet switched over to the stateā€™s new online system.

In recent weeks many attorneys have been forced to file motions the old fashioned way ā€” on paper.

ā€œThis assault on the Kansas system of justice is evil and criminal,ā€ the statement said. ā€œToday, we express our deep sorrow that Kansans will suffer at the hands of these cybercriminals.ā€

A preliminary review indicates that the stolen information includes district court case records on appeal and other potentially confidential data, and those affected will be notified once a full review is complete, the statement said.

Analyst Allan Liska of the cybersecurity firm Recorded Future said no ransomware group leak site has published any information yet.

Judicial Branch spokesperson Lisa Taylor declined to answer questions including whether the state paid a ransom or the name of the group behind the attack, saying the statement stands on its own.

If organizations don't pay a ransom, data usually begins to appear online within a few weeks, said analyst Brett Callow of the cybersecurity firm Emsisoft. Victims that pay get a ā€œpinky promise" that stolen data will be destroyed, but some are extorted a second time, he said.

In the weeks since the Kansas attack, access to court records has only partially been restored. A public access service center with 10 computer terminals is operating at the Kansas Judicial Center in Topeka.

The Judicial Branch said it would take several weeks to return to normal operations, including electronic filing, and the effort involves ā€œbuttressing our systems to guard against future attacks.ā€

A risk assessment of the stateā€™s court system, issued last year, is kept ā€œpermanently confidentialā€ under state law. But two recent audits of other state agencies identified weaknesses. The most recent one, released in July, said ā€œagency leaders donā€™t know or sufficiently prioritize their IT security responsibilities.ā€


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