California Bar Investigates After Records Published Online
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The State Bar of California is investigating a data breach after learning that a website published confidential information about 260,000 attorney discipline cases in California and other jurisdictions.
State Bar officials learned about the posted records on Feb. 24, the Los Angeles Times reported Sunday.
As of Saturday night, all the confidential information that had been published on the website judyrecords.com had been removed, the newspaper said. The records included case numbers, file dates, information about the types of cases and their statuses, respondent and complaining witnesses names.
“We apologize to anyone who is affected by the website’s unlawful display of nonpublic data,” State Bar executive Leah Wilson said in a statement. “We take our obligations to protect confidential data with the utmost seriousness, and we are doing everything we can to ensure that we resolve this issue quickly and prevent any such breaches from recurring.”
Full case records were not published. Officials said they don’t know whether the published information was the result of a hacking incident.
Judyrecords.com is a website that aggregates nationwide court case records.
The State Bar website allows the public to search for case information, but the information on the attorney discipline cases posted by judyrecords.com is not supposed to be available to the public, the Times said.
- After 62 Years, Florida Appeals Court Drops the Expert Witness Rule on Attorney Fees
- Convicted Insurance Mogul Lindberg Should Pay $1.6B Restitution to Companies
- Toilet Paper Warehouse in California Destroyed by Fire; Employee Arrested
- Secret Codes and Yuan Fees Get Ships Through Iran’s Hormuz Tollbooth