Election 2016: Foreign Hackers Breach Voting Systems In Illinois And Arizona; FBI Cyber Division Issues Alert

“The FBI is requesting that states contact their Board of Elections and determine if any similar activity to their logs, both inbound and outbound, has been detected,” reads the alert, reports Yahoo News. “Attempts should not be made to touch or ping the IP addresses directly.”

The FBI issued a “flash alert” to warn election officials in the country earlier this month after foreign hackers breached two state election databases. The first cyberattack in Illinois may have left voter information vulnerable to hackers while a second attempted attack, which was not successful in acquiring data, took place in Arizona.

According to Illinois State Board of Election officials, the hack in Illinois started in July and may have compromised the last four digits of Social Security numbers, names, birthdays, addresses and drivers’ license numbers of nearly 200,000 voters. "It looks to be fewer than 200,000 [names]" said Ken Menzel, general counsel for the elections board, to The Chicago Tribune. "We say that the system was compromised in this context, that it's been accessed. We're very confident nothing was added, deleted or altered."

Meanwhile, the hackers managed to introduce malicious software to the voter registration system in Arizona. After being alerted by the FBI, the Arizona Department of Administration reportedly took their voting registration offline and were able to limit the data stolen.

Read the entire story and view a brief video here.


Volunteer Donate

get updates