Interior Dept. Computer System Insecure
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/09/29/AR2005092901
862_pf.html

By JENNIFER TALHELM
The Associated Press
Thursday, September 29, 2005; 7:24 PM

WASHINGTON -- An investigation of the computer systems in several Interior
Department offices found numerous security flaws that threaten the
department's overall computer security and must be fixed, according to an
internal report.

Tests by the Interior Department's Office of the Inspector General found
several bureaus and offices "still suffer from serious weaknesses in their
security posture," Inspector General Earl Devaney wrote in a Sept. 6 memo to
Assistant Secretary Lynn Scarlett.

According to the report, obtained by The Associated Press on Thursday,
investigators several times were able to masquerade as authorized users,
roam the internal networks of some of the department's most sensitive
computer systems and manipulate data. The tests were performed in phases
beginning in November 2004.

But Devaney said the department has balked at fixing the system.

"Rather than simply accepting the results of our testing and promptly
addressing the underlying vulnerabilities, the department and bureaus have,
to date, expended considerable time and energy debating our findings,
challenging our methodology and impugning the credentials and integrity of
our staff and contractors," Devaney wrote.

"I do not wish to repeat this past experience," he added, suggesting the
department work to fix the problem.

Interior Department spokesman Dan DuBray said the investigation was done as
part of an internal effort to identify any "potential weaknesses or
conceivable potential vulnerabilities."

The department's computer security has been challenged recently as part of a
class-action lawsuit in which thousands of American Indians accuse the
department of cheating them out of billions of dollars by mismanaging oil,
gas, grazing, timber and other royalties from their land since 1887.

Plaintiffs have asked that a federal district court judge order Interior
Secretary Gale Norton to shut down the information technology systems to
protect data.

DuBray said the department will continue to aggressively work to strengthen
the computer systems, "which are now among the most intricately examined in
all of government."



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