Tag Archive for: lawyer

Lawyer says MPS hasn’t contacted hacking victims 5 months later


Thousands of files, including sensitive information, were released online in March after the district didn’t pay a $1 million ransom.

MINNEAPOLIS — Five months after cyber criminals attacked Minneapolis Public Schools, a new, scathing report from the Associated Press says that officials still haven’t informed the victims.

Some of the information, including highly sensitive medical records, like assault complaints, social security numbers and union grievances, were leaked online after the district didn’t pay a $1 million ransom. 

One lawyer now representing some of the victims says his firm is investigating whether the district violated any of its obligations under Minnesota’s Data Practices Act. 

The breach, that the Minneapolis school district said included the release of personal data, wasn’t disclosed until mid-March. Experts call it an aggressive attack that included 300,000 files

“This is not an MPS problem, this is not a Minneapolis problem, this is not a public school problem,” said cybersecurity expert Ian Coldwater. “This happens all over the place to all kinds of places.”

Research shows one in three districts across the country were breached by 2021. What little resources there were then were spent on remote learning and internet connectivity.

Minnesota’s IT specialists confirm it got a $5.5 million boost from lawmakers this legislative session. The state also got another $18 million in federal funds that entities, like school districts, can apply for to upgrade its infrastructure. 

“These families are floored and totally taken by surprise,” said attorney Jeff Storms, who represents some of the victims. 

“They had no idea their children’s sensitive information had been leaked on the internet and from what we’ve seen from the scope of this breach, the district did not take reasonable measures to…

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Arnold & Porter law firm hires CIA lawyer for national security work


(Reuters) – Law firm Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer said Tuesday that it hired a top lawyer from the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency to join its white-collar practice, as the Biden administration spotlights national security issues in its corporate enforcement efforts.

Deborah Curtis, a former CIA deputy general counsel, will be a partner in the firm’s white-collar defense and investigations group in Washington, D.C. Curtis said she will specialize in national security matters including export control restrictions, foreign influence laws and supply chain regulations.

Curtis’ arrival comes as the Biden administration prepares to heighten enforcement of economic sanctions and export controls, targeting corporate conduct that may undermine U.S. efforts to counter adversaries like Russia and China.

Curtis said multinational companies are still “coming to grips” with government enforcement and regulatory actions carried out with the aim of protecting national security.

“National security wields such a heavy hammer,” Curtis said. “If the government raises the national security specter, it has a real chilling effect on your ability to counter.”

Curtis said she joined Washington-founded Arnold & Porter because the 1,000-lawyer firm has credibility within the U.S. intelligence community and already has a national security dimension to its white-collar practice.

At the CIA, Curtis handled litigation and investigations, responding to congressional inquiries and lawsuits involving the U.S. intelligence agency, and started a task force to provide rapid legal advice during intelligence crises.

She was previously chief counsel for industry and security at the U.S. Department of Commerce, where she worked on export control policy and helped draft restrictions on China-headquartered Huawei Technologies’ access to computer chips.

Curtis also worked at the U.S. Justice Department as a supervisor in the National Security Division and as a prosecutor in the U.S. attorney’s office in Washington.

While not a member of U.S. Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s team that investigated possible coordination between Russia and individuals connected to Donald Trump’s election campaign, Curtis worked…

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Nick Sandmann’s Wacky QAnon Supporting Lawyer Threatens Reporters For ‘Speculating’ On Washington Post’s Settlement With Sandmann

On Friday, we wrote about the bad reporting concerning Nick Sandmann’s settlement with the Washington Post, that nearly every knowledgeable lawyer figures was likely for “nuisance value” to get rid of the lawsuit. We noted that the NY Post’s coverage of it misleadingly suggested that the kid got many millions of dollars, when there’s no evidence to support that conclusion, and plenty to suggest he got very little. If you want a thorough debunking of “the kid got paid” narrative, this thread by @RespectableLawyer lays out the details. As we had noted in our post, the court had already rejected nearly all of the claims in the case, and only allowed it to be reinstated to allow for very narrow discovery on very narrow issues which Sandmann almost certainly would not have won on. There was basically no chance Sandmann would win the case. So, a nuisance fee settlement makes it worthwhile to everyone. The paper gets out of the case for less than the cost of going through discovery and the whole summary judgment process, and Sandmann gets to say he got paid, without ever saying how little.

However, on Monday, Sandmann’s lawyer, L. Lin Wood (who you may recall from his ability to lose one of the rare defamation cases that I thought actually had a chance to succeed, against Elon Musk) completely lost his shit on Twitter because enough people were calling out the fact that Sandmann most likely got peanuts, which destroyed the narrative Wood has been trying to sell. Wood, who apparently is now a supporter of the QAnon conspiracy theory based on his willingness to include the #WWG1WGA tag in his Twitter profile (if you’re not familiar, it stands for the silly QAnon phrase: “where we go one, we go all”), has apparently decided that merely speculating on the settlement amounts violates agreements people were not a party to.

Either way, Wood started threatening people and CNN. In separate tweets he accused both Brian Stelter (an on-air CNN personality) and Asha Rangappa (a lawyer and law professor who sometimes appears on CNN) for “speculating” on the settlement between Sandmann and the Washington Post. He even said that if Stelter isn’t fired, he’ll sue CNN.



Wood is arguing that CNN on air talent is violating a confidentiality agreement that was part of the settlement in a different case (CNN settled a similar case with Sandmann, likely on similar terms, back in January, at which point we wrote about similarly misleading reporting regarding the settlement). With Stelter, he’s arguing that merely retweeting a lawyer suggesting that the most likely outcome of the Washington Post case was a nuisance fee settlement is a violation of that confidentiality agreement. With Rangappa, it’s her own speculation.

First off, neither Stelter nor Rangappa are even remotely connected to the Washington Post settlement, so they’re not parties to the case and clearly are not restricted by any confidentiality agreement and are free to speculate (or in Stelter’s case, to retweet someone else’s speculation) of the Washington Post settlement. The only way there might be a tiny (extremely weak) argument is if they were employed by the Washington Post. But even then they would have no actual insight into the actual settlement terms or amounts, and speculating is not violating a confidentiality settlement when they have no awareness of the terms. But to say that CNN employees are somehow violating the confidentiality agreement in a separate case for speculating on a different case is… just wacky nonsense.

Of course, many lawyers who understand this stuff pointed out that Wood freaking out that it violates confidentiality agreements to say that he settled the Sandmann cases for nuisance value… certainly seems to suggest that Wood is effectively confirming that it’s true. Of course, after a bunch of people started to say that, he started insisting that his problem is with “false speculation” violating confidentiality agreements, but that makes no sense. That’s like when the White House tries to argue that a leak of classified information is false. If it’s false, it’s not classified info. Claiming it’s a leak confirms it’s accurate.

Here, if anyone is violating a confidentiality agreement (which, again, they are not) it would be in revealing information to that is covered by the agreement. Speculating — and even more bizarrely — speculating falsely, is unlikely to be much of a violation. At best, Wood might be able to argue that there’s some sort of total gag order that came with the settlements saying that CNN/WaPo and staff won’t ever discuss anything having to do with Nick Sandmann and his sketchy lawsuits. I’d be surprised if either company agreed to such things, but it’s not crazy, and the insurance companies backing CNN might have even been willing to agree to such nonsense terms.

But that’s still not going to do very much here. There’s no way on-air talent was privy to any of the details, and it’s hard to see how a gag order would extend to them.

Also, it kind of makes you wonder why Wood would be so insistent on this here. If he really pressured CNN into agreeing to such a total gag order, why would he do that unless it’s to hide a terribly tiny settlement for his client? If he actually won big money for Sandmann, he’d be excited about it, not negotiating for CNN to keep the details quiet. And why would he be so angry about anyone talking about the details of the settlement unless he didn’t want people speculating on how little he was actually able to secure?

The whole Twitter freak out did his own client a huge disservice, and filing any followup lawsuits will likely only serve to harm his client even more.

Techdirt.