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ARTICLE ADCISA Director Jen Easterly has confirmed she was the subject of a swatting attempt on December 30 after a bogus report of a shooting at her home.
Easterly described the incident as a "harrowing" experience in an official statement:
Swatting — calling in a hoax an emergency report for a serious crime to bring heavily armed law enforcement officers onto the scene can sometimes turn deadly, as was the case with a Kansas man who was killed by police in 2017 when a California gamer made a fake emergency call after a dispute over a Call of Duty session.
Over the last few months, criminals have also been using this tactic in extortion attempts and trying to force victim organizations, specifically hospitals and medical clinics, to pay ransom demand by swatting their patients.
After injecting cancer hospital with ransomware, crims threaten to swat patients Bomb scare causes mass evacuation at DEF CON Future of America's Cyber Safety Review Board hangs in balance amid calls for rethink US agencies warn made-in-China drones might help Beijing snoop on the worldLocal paper, The Record first reported that police in Arlington County, Virginia, were investigating a 911 call on the evening of December 30 that falsely claimed a shooting had occurred inside a home on Easterly's block. The CISA declined to answer questions about who was behind the crime or why Easterly was targeted.
Several politicians and election officials have been targeted by swatting attempts over the last couple months as the US gears up for a contentious 2024 presidential election. These include Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows, following her decision that Donald Trump was ineligible to be on her state's primary ballot.
Other calls have targeted judges overseeing cases against Trump, Democratic and Republican politicians of both parties, a prosecutor, the White House, and state capital buildings in at least eight states. ®