Florida juvenile justice systems offline after hacker breakin

pGAINESVILLE  Hackers broke into the computer network of the Florida Department of Juvenile Justice in Tallahassee which runs the states juvenile detention centers and programs to steer troubled kids away from crime It led to a continuing shutdown of the digital backbone the agency uses to manage cases statewideppThe department took offline some of its computer systems as early as March 29 due to what spokeswoman Amanda Slama described as an unspecified security concern she confirmed in a statement Thursday afternoon two days after a reporters initial inquiries about the matterppSlama said the affected systems include the Juvenile Justice Information System the backbone for the entire agency We are still assessing the situation Slama said in a statement Protecting the integrity of our systems is our top priorityppA department employee speaking on condition of anonymity said hackers were seeking a ransom to restore the agencys systems The break in happened last week when an employee opened an infected email this person said The employee was not authorized to talk publicly about the incidentppState and local government agencies in Florida are prohibited under a 2022 state law that Gov Ron DeSantis signed from paying ransoms to hackersppSome email accounts for employees were bouncing messages as undeliverable and indicating that internet routing for large parts of the entire department fldjjgov was offline The public website for the agency appeared to be unaffectedppSome employees across Florida were told to go home from their offices and write information about ongoing juvenile cases in offline Microsoft Word documents so they could enter the material into the system whenever it came back onlineppSlama declined to answer any further questions including about the report of a ransom demand or which law enforcement agencies were investigatingppThe outages effects included preventing employees from uploading records needed by judges in upcoming court hearings It also was causing employees to lose access to records about juvenile criminal cases including phone numbers and home addresses of young offenders who officials must contact regularly for checkins as part of their probation requirements ppUnder state law any serious ransom demands by hackers or computer break ins must be reported to the Florida Cybersecurity Operations Center and the Cybercrime Office of the Florida Department of Law Enforcement within 48 hours after a break in or no more than 12 hours after a ransom demandppThose cases also must be reported to House Speaker Paul Renner and Senate President Kathleen Passidomo Passidomos spokeswoman declined Thursday to discuss the computer intrusion The governors press office the House speakers spokesman Florida Department of Law Enforcement and office of the states chief information officer did not immediately respond to questions about what was happening ppThe juvenile justice department is run by Eric S Hall appointed by DeSantis as secretary in November 2021 Hall previously served in the education department under the DeSantis administrationppThis story was produced by Fresh Take Florida a news service of the University of Florida College of Journalism and Communications The reporter can be reached at vivienneserretufledup