Kansas Courts' Computer Systems Are Starting to Come Back Online, 2 Months After Cyberattack

The court system in Kansas has started bringing its computer system for managing cases back online, two months after a foreign cyberattack forced officials to shut it down along with public access to documents and other systems, the judicial branch announced Thursday.
The case management systems for district courts in 28 of the state's 105 counties are expected to be back online by Monday, with others following by the end of the week.
Online access to documents for the public will be restored after that, though counties that go back online will be able to offer access through terminals at their courthouses, the judicial branch said.
The courts also have restored systems that allow people to apply for marriage licenses online and file electronic requests for orders to protect them from abuse, stalking and human trafficking.
Judicial branch officials have not publicly disclosed the hackers' demands, whether a ransom was paid or how much the state has spent in restoring judicial branch systems.
Asked about a ransom Thursday, judicial branch spokesperson Lisa Taylor referred to last month's statement.
The outages affected the courts in 104 counties - all but the state's most populous one, Johnson County in the Kansas City area.
Johnson County has its own systems and isn't scheduled to join the state's systems until next year.
The long outage has forced courts in the affected counties to return to having documents filed on paper.
Judicial branch officials acknowledged that it could take weeks for the courts to electronically log all of the filings since the Oct. 12 shutdown.
The electronic filing and case management systems for the state Court of Appeals and Supreme Court will come back online after the district courts are done.
Last month, state Rep. Kyle Hoffman, the chair of the Legislature's information technology committee, told reporters after a meeting that the results of the 2020 audit were terrible, but he provided no details.
He said the 2022 audit showed a lot of improvement, again without disclosing any details.
Two recent audits of other state agencies identified cybersecurity weaknesses.


This Cyber News was published on www.securityweek.com. Publication date: Fri, 15 Dec 2023 18:13:04 +0000


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