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Terry Childs convicted in San Fran network case

28 April 2010

Things are not looking good for Terry Childs, the former San Francisco network administrator who compromised the city's network and essentially held it to ransom. Childs was convicted of computer tampering this week, and now faces up to five years in jail.

The 45-year-old Childs cost the city of San Francisco over $200 000 after he gave himself sole access to the Fiber Wide Area Network (FiberWAN), prosecutors said in a San Francisco county Superior Court hearing that ended in his conviction on one felony count. Childs had worked at the Department of Telecommunications Information services for five years, and was reportedly angry that he might be laid off by his employer.

According to reports in the San Francisco Chronicle, he also resented supervisors for questioning his security clearance after learning of a previous criminal conviction.

Childs held the electronic keys to administrative functions for a network that managed a large proportion of the city's law enforcement and payroll records. Reports about the case made at the time suggested that he had essentially built the FiberWAN network single-handedly, and was solely responsible for its administration. However, he was not responsible for the records that it managed, and these were not considered to be at risk during the period when he refused to divulge passwords for the system, effectively locking his superiors out of the network's administrative functions.

Childs will be given credit for the time that he has already served while waiting for his four-month trial. He has been held in a county jail since 2008, after bail was set at $5m. Shortly after his incarceration, Childs, who was reportedly suspended for insubordination after refusing to hand the passwords over, was subsequently visited by San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom, and persuaded to release the login credentials.

This article is featured in:
Compliance and Policy  • Identity and Access Management  • Public Sector

 

Comments

wuffie50 says:

30 April 2010
Law enforcement and payroll records were available to employees throughout this incident. Your story hints that Childs denied access to those records, when in fact, the fiber wan performed flawlessly. After he gave the administrative passwords to Mayor Gavin Newsom, management fumbled for hours trying to log in to the administrative interface...and failed. Childs had to give step by step instructions, through his lawyer, on how to use the passwords and access the system. Management was not competent to even log in. After they published the same passwords in court records, VPN access had to be restricted for days due to this obvious security breach. Who denied access to city services? Management did!

wuffie50 says:

30 April 2010
Law enforcement and payroll records were available to employees throughout this incident. Your story hints that Childs denied access to those records, when in fact, the fiber wan performed flawlessly. After he gave the administrative passwords to Mayor Gavin Newsom, management fumbled for hours trying to log in to the administrative interface...and failed. Childs had to give step by step instructions, through his lawyer, on how to use the passwords and access the system. Management was not competent to even log in. After they published the same passwords in court records, VPN access had to be restricted for days due to this obvious security breach. Who denied access to city services? Management did!

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