Sec. Of State Office: No Evidence of Tampering With Voting Machines

Officials in some states are trying to figure out whether local election offices were targeted in an apparent effort by Russian military intelligence to hack into election software last fall.

The efforts were detailed in a recently leaked report attributed to the U.S. National Security Agency.

North Carolina is checking on whether any local systems were breached, while the revelation prompted an election security review in Virginia. Both are considered presidential battleground states.

In Illinois, officials are trying to determine which election offices used software from the contractor that the report said was compromised.

The three are among eight states where election offices had contracts with VR Systems, a Florida-based company that provided software to manage voter registrations. The others are Florida, California, Indiana, New York and West Virginia.

The report, dated last month, asserts that hackers obtained information from company employees and used that to send phishing emails to 122 local election officials just before the election last November in an attempt to break into their systems.

So far, there is no indication that voting or ballot counting in any states were affected. Officials in at least five counties in Florida — a key political swing state — received the emails, the Miami Herald reported. It’s not clear where else the emails may have been sent.

But the revelation, published by the online news outlet The Intercept, set off questions in the states where VR provides software.

North Carolina state elections board director Kim Westbrook Strach said her office had not been contacted by any federal officials about whether any of the 21 county election offices that use VR software were targeted. Still, her office was contacting county boards about potential breaches.

The news of a reported Russian hacking attempt surprised Bill Brian, elections board chairman in Durham County, which experienced problems with VR Systems’ electronic poll books on Election Day. The issue forced officials to abandon the system, issue paper ballots and extend voting hours, but officials there said that trouble did not appear to have been caused by hacking.

“We have not had any big, ‘Uh oh, we’ve got a problem with computers,'” said Brian, a Republican.

In Virginia, state Elections Commissioner Edgardo Cortes, said he could not comment on whether any local officials were targeted by the phishing emails, but he said he was not aware of any breaches. Still, the disclosure of the NSA document has prompted a review of election security, he said.

There also is no indication to date of the reported Russian attempt “resulting in any contact with local election officials in West Virginia,” said Steven Adams, spokesman for the secretary of state.

In some states, VR software was used in only a handful of voting jurisdictions.

New York election officials said just four counties used the software last year and that federal authorities had not contacted the state about any of them being targeted.

California officials said only Humboldt County, in the far northern part of the state, used VR software during last year’s election. Sam Mahood, a spokesman for Secretary of State Alex Padilla, declined to say if the office was investigating whether the county was targeted.

So far, Humboldt County has found no evidence that anyone in the elections office received the phishing emails, County Clerk Kelly Sanders said. The county used the software to sign in voters.

Illinois officials have asked local elections offices whether they used VR’s software in 2016. By midday Wednesday, only one county said it had.

Last September, the Department of Homeland Security told the AP that hackers believed to be Russian agents had targeted voter registration systems in more than 20 states. No evidence of tampering emerged in the worst-hit state, Illinois. Hackers who penetrated its network with a method called SQL injection spent three weeks rooting around before they were discovered in July. Officials said nothing was added, changed or deleted.

The general counsel for the Illinois state elections board, Ken Menzel, said the state cooperated with the FBI and other federal authorities in the investigation but was not told who might have been responsible. He said the intrusion had been traced to some servers in the Netherlands and he heard speculation of Russian involvement.

“The feds did not see fit to enlighten us to the extent that the feds know more than that,” he said. “That wasn’t part of our need-to-know.”

Kay Stimson, a spokeswoman for the National Association of Secretaries of State, whose members oversee elections in several states, said the group wants to know why federal officials did not warn potential victims at the time the attacks were allegedly happening.

Stimson said that with more specific information that breaches were possible, states could have offered help to local election officials and created firewalls to make sure any local problems would not have caused problems at the state level.

The Department of Homeland Security did not respond to a request for comment.

Manchin Calling on President to Appoint Special Prosecutor in Russia Probe

West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin is calling on the president to appoint a special prosecutor in the investigation into Russia’s potential tampering in the 2016 presidential race.

The call comes after President Trump fired FBI Director James Comey Wednesday.

Comey has been leading the investigation into Russian meddling and potential ties between Russian officials and the Trump campaign.

The former director was previously criticized for releasing information about an investigation into Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton just weeks before Election Day—a move that garnered praise from Trump on the campaign trail.

The president now says he can’t trust Comey’s judgment.

Comey reportedly asked for additional funding for the Russian investigation, according to Manchin who said Wednesday the Senate will continue with its investigation into the issue, but a special prosecutor is necessary to ensure public trust.

“I believe that we need a special, independent prosecutor, somebody that has no political backing whatsoever, [whose] job can’t be in jeopardy, they answer to Congress and make sure that the American public has the confidence that this is not going to be a witch hunt from one side of the aisle to a protection of the administration or anybody else on the other side of the aisle,” he said.

Trump said the firing came as a recommendation from his Attorney General and Deputy Attorney General.

WVU Voices Support for International Community at Forum and Vigil

Laila Sakkal, a senior pre-med student at West Virginia University who was born in Charleston, held back tears as she talked about her Syrian grandmother, who can no longer join Sakkal’s family in the United States as planned. On Friday, President Donald Trump signed an executive order that temporarily barred non-U.S. citizens from seven predominantly Muslim countries from entering the U.S. – though the details of the order are still unclear. 

The order barred Syrian refugees indefinitely. 

“We’ve been working for a visa for her for to come here and stay with us for over two years. It just got approved last month. We were going to go get her in March because she’s too sick to travel alone,” Sakkal said. 

Credit Jesse Wright
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West Virginia University community members gather Monday, Jan. 30, 2017, at Woodburn Circle for a vigil to support those affected by a recent U.S. executive order.

On a cold and snowy Monday night, Sakkal and others voiced opposition to the executive order at a vigil at WVU’s Woodburn Circle in Morgantown. Students and community members who who weren’t affected showed their support for those who were through signs and speeches. At one point, a group of men drove by chanting Trump’s name.

The presidents of at least three academic organizations – WVU, West Virginia State University and Marshall University – have pledged their support for international students and faculty affected by the ban. WVU estimates that the order affects about 140 of their students and faculty. 

Before the vigil, WVU held an open forum for concerned community members to ask questions about the executive order to a panel that comprised of WVU Provost Joyce McConnell, immigration attorney Barbara Bower, Vice President for Global Strategy and International Affairs William Brustein, Dean of Students Corey Farris and Muslim Student Association President Sara Berzingi. 

Credit Jesse Wright / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Many who attended the vigil held signs to support those affected by the executive order.

“You may not know how quickly words spread in an administrative structure. But as soon as the executive order was issued, we were on it,” McConnell said. 

Questions ranged from, “Will WVU provide housing to international students who can no longer return home during breaks” (yes, though pricing was unknown at the time) to “Will WVU become a sanctuary campus” (the university will wait and see how events unfold before making that decision).

Credit Jesse Wright / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
A community member asks a question of the panelists at an open forum at prior to the vigil.

Several students and faculty asked Bower questions about the order’s effect on international travel and employment and education opportunities for international students. She emphasized that the executive order was written so broadly that not even immigration lawyers can say for certain how it will be enforced or which demographics will be affected.

“If you are from any of those seven countries, and you don’t have to travel abroad, I would encourage you to stay here,” she said. 

Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., released a statement Monday evening opposing the executive order. He wrote that he supports the extreme vetting of immigrants, but that he’s concerned that the executive order was not “properly vetted by senior security advisors and members in the Administration.” West Virginia’s Republican senator, Shelley Moore Capito, had not released a statement regarding the executive order as of Monday night. 

In a statement to The Charleston Gazette, Representative Evan Jenkins said that vetting immigrants keeps the country safe, but asked the Trump administration to clarify the parameters of this specific executive order. 

 

Six W.Va. Stories to Watch in 2017

Front Porch hosts Scott Finn, Laurie Lin, and Rick Wilson tell us which stories they’ll be following in 2017:

1. The fate of the Affordable Care Act. “Are they gonna throw 225,000 West Virginians under the bus? I hope they don’t just get rid of something without replacing it,” Wilson said.

2. Charter schools. West Virginia is one of only a handful of states not to allow privately-run charter schools, but Lin says that’s likely to change this year. “It’s been tried many, many times. The teacher unions have been so adamantly against it, it hasn’t gotten done. I think this could be the year,” she said.

3. The backlash against “fake news.” Finn said, “Now you’re seeing a really interesting trend where the Washington Post is hiring new reporters…the New York Times is expanding. Every time Trump tweets attacking a media outlet, the media outlet has a whole bunch of new subscribers.”

“I think its been a real awakening for folks – the need for fact-based journalism,” he said.

4. New awareness of white, working class voters. West Virginia is largely white and working class, Lin noted. “That can’t be a bad thing, to have the nation and media focused on people like West Virginians,” Lin said, as well as the Democratic party, which Lin said had largely written this group off.

5. Economic alternatives in the coalfields, Wilson said, with projects by groups like the Coalfields Development Corporation – especially in agriculture and tourism.

6. The end of the War on Coal rhetoric. With a new Trump administration, Finn predicted a decline in this sort of talk. “It allows people to start having better conversations about how we have to diversify,” he said.

“The Front Porch” is a place where we tackle the tough issues facing West Virginia and Appalachia with some of the region’s most interesting thinkers.

WVPB Executive Director Scott Finn serves as host and provocateur, joined by Laurie Lin, a conservative lawyer and columnist, and Rick Wilson, a liberal columnist and avid goat herder who works for the American Friends Service Committee.

Subscribe to “The Front Porch” podcast on iTunes or however you listen to podcasts.

An edited version of “The Front Porch” airs Fridays at 4:50 p.m. on West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s radio network, and the full version is available above.

Share your opinions with us about these issues, and let us know what you’d like us to discuss in the future. Send a tweet to @radiofinn or @wvpublicnews, or e-mail Scott at sfinn @ wvpublic.org

The Front Porch is underwritten by The Charleston Gazette Mail, providing both sides of the story on its two editorial pages. Check it out: http://www.wvgazettemail.com/

Gov. Moore's Grandsons Talk Election to W. Va. House of Delegates

Two of the grandsons of former West Virginia Governor Arch Moore are looking forward to spending more time together.  They’ve both been elected to the House of Delegates.  Moore Capito of Charleston is the son of U.S. Senator Shelley Moore Capito and Riley Moore of Harper’s Ferry is the son of Arch A. Moore III.  They sat down with us for a little family reunion.

Delegate-elect Moore Capito of Charleston.

Us & Them: Taking an Ass Whoopin'

The 2016 presidential campaign was one of the most brutal in America’s history. “Us & Them” host Trey Kay was stunned by the outcome and is trying understand what the whole thing means. Are truth and bitter reality the new Us? Have our news sources become Them?

From West Virginia Public Broadcasting and PRX, this is “Us & Them,” the podcast where we tell the stories about America’s cultural divides.

Subscribe to “Us & Them” on Apple PodcastsNPR One or wherever you listen to podcasts.

Share your opinions with us about these issues, and let us know what you’d like us to discuss in the future. Send a tweet to @usthempodcast or @wvpublic, or leave a comment on Facebook.com/usthempodcast.

This episode is part of a series made possible with financial assistance from the West Virginia Humanities Council, a state affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities.

And if you enjoyed this episode, join our community and sustain “Us & Them” with a pledge of support

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