Former Cyber Security COO Pleads Guilty for Hacking Hospitals

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Former COO of the Atlanta-based cybersecurity company Securolytics, Vikas Singla, launched a series of cyberattacks on the non-profit healthcare organization Gwinnett Medical Center (GMC), which has locations in Lawrenceville and Duluth, Georgia.

GMC suffered a financial loss of $817,804.12 as a result of the defendant’s computer intrusions that affected the GMC ASCOM phone system, printers, and Digitizer, as well as the defendant’s course of conduct.

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Specifics of the Hack

The plea agreement states that on September 27, 2018, the defendant intentionally sent a command that caused an unlawful change to the ASCOM phone system configuration template for the GMC hospital campus in Duluth, Georgia.

Additionally, he knew he did not have the authority to make the changes he intended to make to the configuration files of the ASCOM phone system.

As a result, upon the defendant’s transmission, every ASCOM phone at GMC Duluth that was linked to the phone system became unusable. There was an outage of over two hundred ASCOM handset devices.

Internal communication between nurses and doctors, even during “Code Blue” emergencies, was made possible by the ASCOM phones utilized by the hospital staff members. Making calls from outside the hospital was also possible using the ASCOM phones.

The defendant gained access to over 300 patients’ names, dates of birth, and sex without permission from a Hologic R2 Digitizer that was attached to a mammography machine at the GMC hospital in Lawrenceville.

The Digitizer required a password to access it, and it was available over GMC’s VPN. His access to the Digitizer’s information was not authorized.

Singla intentionally sent a command that led to the printing of a file called Baidu.txt, which caused more than 200 printers at Gwinnett’s hospital campuses in Duluth and Lawrenceville to print patient information such as name, birthdate, and sex that was obtained without consent from the digitizer and interspersed with the statement “WE OWN YOU.”

“The printers were used in connection with patient care and the messages printed on the computer had the potential to cause fear among medical staff and impair the provision of hospital services.”

On October 2, 2018, Singla allegedly “caused” the posting of 43 messages on the @baidu325017231 Twitter account, alleging that Gwinnett had been compromised. 

Prosecutors claim in the plea agreement that Singla received the name, date of birth, and gender of each patient from the hacked digitizer, which was included in each of the 43 messages.

As part of the plea agreement, he has now consented to pay the Insurance Company and Northside Hospital Gwinnett in Lawrenceville more than $817,000 in repayment, plus interest.

Given that Singla has a serious vascular illness and a rare, incurable form of cancer, the plea agreement suggests home detention as an alternative to imprisonment.

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