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A journalist says she warned Elections Alberta weeks agone virtually what she believed could be a monumental secrecy breach poignant millions of voters. But the agency says provincial legislation passed last year constrained them from investigating a complaint about voter information posted on a website belonging to a separatist group.
Jen Gerson, a journalist and political commentator who is the co-founder of The Line on Substack, said she wrote Elections Alberta on March 31 after a source contacted her about information on a website run by Alberta separatist group the Centurion Project that appeared to come from the provincial voters list.Â
On Thursday morning, officials with Elections Alberta appeared in an Edmonton courtroom where they successfully obtained a temporary injunction to force the Centurion Project into removing the voter information from its website. The group complied hours later.
Gerson said her source told her the information, which included the full names, addresses, contact information and electoral divisions of 2.9 million Albertans, was easy to access.Â
Gerson said she decided to alert Elections Alberta and not publish a story about what she had learned because of the sensitive nature of the information.Â
âWhich means that people who are, for example, victims of stalking, domestic violence, public figures like myself, activists and politicians will all have their personal information, including their personal home addresses, on that voter file.â
Gerson said she was contacted by an Elections Alberta investigator the next day. Ten days later she said she received a letter from Elections Commissioner Paula Hale saying that while her evidence was compelling, the agency was unable to investigate.
âThe legislation requires that we must have âreasonable grounds to believe an offence has occurredâ to start investigations,â Michelle Gurney wrote.Â
ââReasonable groundsâ is a much higher standard than ââgrounds to warrantââ (which was our previous old standard), or ââwhat might seem obviousââ based on a complainantâs suspicions or beliefs.Â
âIt does not determine, though, whether or not Elections Alberta takes a complaint seriously.â
Heather Jenkins, press secretary for Justice Minister Mickey Amery, denied Gurneyâs claim.
Gurney said Elections Alberta can decide to start an investigation after it gets more information on an issue. She did not explain what prompted the agency to take action this week.Â
Elections Alberta has determined that the voter data used by the Centurion Project came from information that was legitimately obtained by the Republican Party of Alberta. Political parties are allowed to have access to voters lists. Third-party groups like the Centurion Project are not. It remains unclear how the separatist group got access to the information.
Elections Alberta gives authorized recipients a digital copy of the list after signing an agreement to use it according to the law. However, Elections Alberta canât control access after the list is released.Â
Alberta separatist group posts personal information of millions of voters
Elections Alberta and the Alberta RCMP are investigating the incident. Alberta Information and Privacy Commissioner Diane McLeod issued a statement Thursday that her office was still working to determine if it had jurisdictional authority to investigate.
Since she considered herself to be a complainant in this matter, Gerson said she felt she could not do a story on it so she passed the information about the Centurion Project on to another Alberta journalist.Â
Gerson published her story after the Centurion Project removed the voter data from its website. She wanted to correct a timeline issued by Elections Alberta on Thursday which she said left people with the impression the agency first heard about the Centurion Projectâs website on Monday.Â
Gerson said she remains puzzled and exasperated by Elections Albertaâs choice to sit on the information for nearly a month, while the data belonging to millions of Albertans remained exposed.Â
âEvery single day that Elections Alberta chose not to act on this, more and more people potentially got access to that database who shouldn't have had access to it,â she said.Â
âThere should be consequences for that, very serious consequences.â
List of names and addresses of millions of Alberta voters posted online
Although the information is no longer publicly posted, Ritesh Kotak, a cybersecurity analyst based in Toronto, said he believes the damage has already been done.Â
âIt doesn't matter if data is up there for a brief second or if it's up there for a prolonged period of time,â he said on Friday. ÂOnce the data is out there, it can be easily downloaded and essentially memorialized. It's there forever.â
While Elections Alberta has methods to detect which partyâs copy of the data was leaked, Kotak said more security protocols, like requiring reauthentication every time a user logs on, need to be put in place.Â
He said he believes Elections Alberta should have had the highest level of security protection on the voters list and actively monitored who was accessing it.Â
Kotak advises people affected by the information breach to use what he calls a zero trust protocol. When someone calls from the government or a bank requesting information, he suggests people hang up and use the phone numbers they know are legitimate, or go to the office in person.Â
Some people have wondered what implications this weekâs developments could have on the verification of citizen initiative petitions.Â
Elections Alberta currently contacts âa statistically valid random sample of electorsâ to ensure people actually signed the petition.Â
But in a news release issued by Elections Alberta late Friday afternoon, Chief Electoral Officer Gordon McClure said that process is changing.Â
Verification will include a search for names that are seeded in copies of the voter lists.Â
Each electoral list legitimately released by Elections Alberta includes a certain number of fictitious â or "seeded" â names. These unique entries on each electoral list allow investigators to trace each dataset back to their source in the event of a breach.
Elections Alberta said this updated practice will apply to all future petitions and to the current separation petition from Stay Free Alberta, as well as singer Corb Lundâs petition against coal mining in the Rocky Mountains.Â
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