
Group behind St. Paul cyberattack alleges they posted 43 gigabytes of data online, mayor says
IT workers were first made aware of "suspicious activity" on July 25 and moved systems offline shortly after to minimize damage, the city said. Carter said Monday that the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency posted an advisory three days before the breach about the group responsible.
"The advisory describes a sophisticated, money-driven organization known for stealing and selling massive volumes of sensitive information from large corporations, hospitals and governments," he said. "Operations that have resulted in stolen data measured in the terabytes."
The files posted "appear to come largely from a single shared network drive" used by the Parks and Recreation Department, and are "varied and unsystematic," according to Carter.
"They include everything from work documents, copies of IDs submitted for HR or travel or even personal items like recipes," he said.
The city allegedly posts more than 153 terabytes of data on its servers.
"In other breaches by this group, they have stolen and sold terabytes, thousands of gigabytes from a single victim," Carter said.
The group demanded a ransom, according to Carter, which the city did not pay.
The city is offering 12 months of free credit monitoring and identity theft protection insurance to every full-time, part-time and seasonal employee, regardless of whether their data was breached.
Since the attack, residents haven't been able to use Wi-Fi at public libraries or pay their water bills online. Some city phones connected through the internet were also impacted.
Carter said in an interview with WCCO on Sunday that around 3,500 city workers are getting their devices checked and passwords reset in what officials are calling "Operation Secure Saint Paul."
As of Monday evening, over 2,000 of those employees have already been through the process. The operation is expected to run through Tuesday.
St. Paul declared a state of emergency after learning of the incident, and Gov. Tim Walz deployed the National Guard's cyber team to assist. The FBI said in a statement to WCCO that it was lending its "investigative expertise" to city officials.
Amid the attack, the city has warned residents to be on the lookout for fraudulent invoices, advising them not to click on any suspicious links or email attachments.
This is a developing story and will be updated. Caroline Cummings
contributed to this report.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
21 minutes ago
- Yahoo
A mother of three was randomly shot and killed outside her California home. A decade later, the murder suspect has finally been arrested
Authorities have arrested a California man suspected of murdering two people, over a decade after their deaths — including an innocent bystander killed in front of her children. Maria Soza, 32, was standing outside her San Francisco home with her three children when she was struck and killed by a stray bullet during a drive-by shooting in 2015. The other victim killed in the shooting was 38-year-old Donte Glenn of San Francisco. On Tuesday, the San Francisco District Attorney's Office announced they had finally arrested a suspect in the cold cases. Anthony James Tyree, 34, also known as 'Dot Diggla,' has been charged with two counts of murder, attempted murder, and possession of a firearm by a felon. District Attorney Brooke Jenkins said Tyree was arrested Monday at his home in Pittsburg, California, after homicide cold case investigators linked him to the shooting. He was scheduled to be arraigned Tuesday afternoon at the San Francisco Hall of Justice. The shootings unfolded on January 27, 2015, when two vehicles sped through the Bayview District neighborhood near Revere Avenue and Ingalls Street. According to prosecutors, Tyree was a passenger in the Dodge pickup when he and another passenger opened fire on a black Infinity SUV. 'Mr. Tyree and another passenger opened fire at the Infinity and its occupants,' the District Attorney's Office wrote. 'The barrage of bullets hit and wounded the driver of the Infinity, and hit and killed the passenger. A stray bullet from the shooting hit and killed a woman standing outside her residence with her family.' That woman was Soza, who family members said in a GoFundMe campaign had just returned from picking her children, aged 13, 8, and 3, from school, when the shooting occured. She collapsed in front of her children, before being rushed to a hospital where she died. Minutes after Soza was shot, the other victim, Glenn, was found with multiple gunshot wounds after trying to get help at The Old Clam House restaurant on Bayshore Boulevard, CBS News reported. He died before reaching a hospital. The case remained unsolved for years, until last summer, when San Francisco police homicide cold case detectives reopened the investigation. By August 2024, investigators developed probable cause linking Tyree to the two murders. On Monday, officers executed a search warrant at Tyree's Pittsburg home, where they said they located an AR-15-style ghost gun hidden in his bedroom. He was taken into custody and is being held at San Francisco County Jail. Prosecutors said they will seek to keep him detained without bail, citing the danger he poses to the public. 'This arrest is the result of tireless work by our homicide cold case unit,' Jenkins said. 'We will now fight to secure justice for Maria Soza, Donte Glenn, and their families.'


Washington Post
24 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Armored National Guard vehicle collides with SUV on Capitol Hill
A military vehicle in a D.C. National Guard convoy collided with an SUV on Capitol Hill early Wednesday morning, an incident underscoring the uncomfortable relationship between city residents and the federal forces that President Donald Trump has deployed to patrol its streets for the past 10 days.


Washington Post
24 minutes ago
- Washington Post
A timeline of the Menendez brothers' double-murder case
LOS ANGELES — After serving nearly 30 years in prison for killing their parents, the Menendez brothers will plead their case in front of a panel of California state parole board commissioners starting Thursday. Erik and Lyle Menendez were sentenced in 1996 to life in prison for fatally shooting their father, Jose Menendez, and mother, Kitty Menendez, in their Beverly Hills mansion in August 1989 . They were 18 and 21 at the time.