Judge Shuts Down Interior Department's Internet
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Monday, March 15, 2004
WASHINGTON A federal judge on Monday once again ordered
the Interior Department to pull the plug on most of its Internet
connections, after finding that the department still hadn't fixed
computer security problems that could jeopardize millions of
dollars in royalties for American Indians.
It is the third time that U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth has
ordered the systems to be disconnected to protect oil, gas, timber
and grazing royalties held in trust for the Indians.
"The interest of the 300,000-plus current beneficiaries of the
individual Indian trust outweigh the potential inconvenience of
those parties that would otherwise have access to Interior's
Internet services," Lamberth wrote.
An Interior Department spokesman could not immediately comment
on the decisions.
The judge allowed all emergency systems, such as those that deal
with law enforcement or fire fighting, to remain connected. The
National Park Service and U.S. Geological Survey, and Interior's
budget office, will also remain connected, because they convinced the
court that they have fixed their lapses.
Lamberth said the move was necessary because the department
refused to work with Special Master Alan Balaran to fix holes in
the computer security, which has been widely criticized in
government reviews as being deficient.
The department has accused Balaran of being biased. Lamberth
denied the department's request to remove him from the case.
The ruling comes in a lawsuit filed on behalf of more than
300,000 American Indian landowners. The department was assigned in
1887 to manage royalties from lands held in trust for the Indians.
But over time, the lands were poorly managed and money was
squandered, stolen or never collected.
The Indians sued in 1996, demanding an accounting that had been
ordered by Congress two years earlier. In 1999, Lamberth said the
department must account for the money and repair its management
flaws.
Since then, however, the case has bogged down in court fights
and congressional maneuvering. Interior insists that just a few
million dollars are owed to the Indian landowners. The Indians'
attorneys contend it is likely tens of billions of dollars.
Lamberth first disconnected the systems in 2001, after Balaran
determined that even a novice hacker could penetrate the security
and access data for the Indian revenues. To prove his point,
Balaran, working with the court, repeatedly penetrated the system's
security and set up a bogus account in his name.
The move left the public unable to access information about
popular national parks and monuments and made it difficult for
Interior agencies to communicate with one another. Emergency
services were allowed to remain connected, and service was restored
as gaps were fixed.
The judge ordered a second, limited shutdown last June, after
the department first resisted Balaran's oversight.
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