Tag Archive for: Tarrant

Tarrant Appraisal District extends protest deadline after ransomware attack


Disagree with the Tarrant Appraisal District’s valuation of your residential property? You now have until May 24 to protest it.

District officials extended the deadline from May 15 after a ransomware attack at the end of March forced systems offline, delaying access to its online protest tool in the process. The group responsible for the attack, Medusa, posted taxpayer information online after the district refused to pay the ransom. Since then, the appraisal district’s essential services are back online and the board approved new funding for cybersecurity measures.

The new deadline allows residents 30 days from the time the online protest function was restored to challenge an appraisal. People can access the online protest function by logging in, heading to their dashboard and clicking the protest button on the left-hand side of the screen.

There are multiple reasons residents can protest, including concerns about incorrect valuations, tax exemptions being denied and incorrect owner or property information. The protests will be considered by the appraisal review board, which schedules hearings to review evidence and determine whether the district erred in its appraisal decision.

Commercial appraisal notices are expected to be mailed May 1, and the deadline to protest these appraisals is May 31 or 30 days from the mailing date, whichever is later.

Before then, voters will head to the polls May 4 to elect three at-large appraisal district board members. Board members do not determine protests or property appraisals.

Emily Wolf is a government accountability reporter for the Fort Worth Report. Contact her at [email protected]At the Fort Worth Report, news decisions are made independently of our board members and financial supporters. Read more about our editorial independence policy here.

This article first appeared on Fort Worth Report and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Ransomware group demands $700,000 from Tarrant Appraisal District


Evil walks this world, and it entered the Tarrant Appraisal District building last week when hackers infiltrated the district’s network, board chairman Vince Puente told those gathered at an emergency meeting March 24.

An unknown ransomware group is demanding $700,000 from the appraisal district, after a network disruption last week took the district’s systems offline. Lindsay B. Nickle, legal counsel for the district, said they believe hacking group Medusa may be responsible for the attack.

“If they steal from (the appraisal district), they’re stealing from our taxpayers,” Puente said.

Nickle said the group claims to have sensitive information, but the district doesn’t know whether taxpayer information has actually been compromised and an investigation is ongoing. She confirmed that the district has made contact with the group responsible, and said no decisions have been made on whether to pay the ransom.

“Nobody wants to pay a ransom,” she said. “And so the investigation is ongoing, and we’re looking into all of our options to recover (information).”

The appraisal district does not know where the attack originated. An outside group has been hired to investigate the incident further, Nickle said, but declined to name them. This is the second confirmed cyberattack against the agency in recent years, the first dating back to October 2022.

Medusa has been behind a rising number of data leaks in 2023, targeting industries like education, manufacturing, health care and retail.

Medusa hacked as many as 74 organizations, mostly in Europe, in 2023.

Lindsey Nickle, legal counsel for the Tarrant Appraisal District, gives media and community members an update on the ransomware attack.

Sandra Sadek

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Fort Worth Report

Lindsey Nickle, legal counsel for the Tarrant Appraisal District, gives media and community members an update on the ransomware attack.

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Woman who recorded herself viewing YouTube on a Tarrant County computer pleads guilty

By A Fort Worth woman who was charged with breach of computer security after she recorded and posted online a video of herself reaching her YouTube channel via a desktop in a Tarrant County government …
computer security – read more

She recorded herself pulling up YouTube on a Tarrant County computer. Now she’s in jail

accused of a computer security breach. Carolyn Rodriguez was conducting what’s known as a First Amendment audit. The audits, done by activists, test constitutional rights often by photographing or …
computer security – read more