Police officials in multiple states reported 911 service outages and interruptions Wednesday night, just hours after a cyber attack warning from the Department of Homeland Security was reported by ABC News.
According to NBC News, authorities reported 911 outages Wednesday night in multiple cities throughout Texas, Nebraska, Nevada, and South Dakota.
In addition to the 911 outages reported by law enforcement authorities in Texas, Nebraska, Nevada, and South Dakota, some reports claimed that 911 outages had also been experienced in Iowa, Florida, Wisconsin, and Kentucky, according to ABC News.
Reporter Nick Sortor shared pictures of some of the 911 outage posts by law enforcement officials, tweeting, “911 systems are now being reported down in all or part of at least EIGHT STATES, including: Texas, Florida, Nebraska, Nevada, South Dakota, Iowa, Kentucky, Wisconsin.”
The DHS bulletin warned, “Cybercriminal exploitation of data stolen during ransomware attacks against the Emergency Service Sector (ESS) likely poses a persistent criminal threat due to the exposure and availability of victims’ personal information.”
ABC News reported that the DHS bulletin warned that cyber security attacks have “disrupted the networks of police department and 911 call center operations,” requiring emergency services “to revert to manual dispatching to sustain their operations” due to computer services being compromised.
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