By BradBlog.com,
November 7, 2006
[link
to article]
On Friday night, we broke Rebecca Abrahams's exclusive story
concerning the long-sought yet
never-released complete "Risk Assessment Report" of Diebold's electronic
voting systems as commissioned by the state of Maryland from the
Scientific Applications International Corporation (SAIC) in 2003.
Tonight, The BRAD BLOG is releasing that
report exclusively in full as given to us by Abrahams, who says she
obtained it from a source described to us as "a patriotic high-level
state official." She says the source is "someone very close to this
situation" in the Maryland government.
The original, never-before-released SAIC report was nearly 200 pages
in all, and details a number of extraordinary security vulnerabilities
found in Diebold's AccuVote-TS (touch-screen) voting systems as deployed
by the state of Maryland initially in 2002. The version of the SAIC
report that was eventually released to the public, after extreme
redaction, was a mere 38 pages long.
It was reported by Abrahams that neither the full MD State Board of
Elections, nor even the Governor himself, was ever allowed to see the
full report.
Regarded by many in the computer science, security, and election
integrity community as "The Pentagon Papers of E-Voting," the report as
released by MD's State Election Administrator, Linda Lamone, was
edited, changed, and, of course, highly redacted by someone.
To this date, it remains unclear whether or not Diebold itself was
responsible for the changes, edits, and redactions, but according to
several computer scientists and security experts with whom we discussed
the matter today, the company currently seems to be the leading
candidate responsible for changing and removing information from the
independently commissioned SAIC report. Those with whom we spoke
questioned the propriety of Diebold having such final control over an
independent report concerning its own systems. Systems, we might add,
that will be used across the state and indeed across the entire country
this November 7th, despite the information withheld from the public in
this 2003 report.
Also unclear since the state and virtually the entire computer science
and security community have been unable to review the complete, original
report until now is whether or not any of the various 180 or so
recommendations for changes contained in the report have ever been
addressed and corrected by either Diebold or the state of Maryland.
Myriad independent reports on Diebold systems have shown, over the last
several months and years since the SAIC report was completed, that
scores of serious security vulnerabilities still remain on Diebold's
voting systems including their paper-based optical-scan voting
machines, touch-screen voting machines, and even their central tabulator
software.
Reports of these serious vulnerabilities have now been documented by
Finnish computer scientist Harri Hursti, the computer security firm
Security Innovation, and BlackBoxVoting.org in both Leon County, FL and
then in Emery County, UT; by a team of scientists at UC Berkeley
commissioned by the CA Sec. of State; by Princeton University; and even
by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security's Computer Emergency
Readiness Team (as The BRAD BLOG originally reported
in September of 2005 after a tip from
a Diebold insider).
Whether or not the vulnerabilities revealed in those subsequent studies
made mostly over the last year or so, but some, such as the Dept. of
Homeland Security's CERT alert came even prior to the 2004 Presidential
Election were discovered previously in the full 2003 SAIC report has
been widely questioned until now.
If, in fact, such vulnerabilities were indeed found in 2003 by SAIC but
subsequently kept covered up by Diebold or their allies within the MD
State Elections division, such as longtime booster Lamone, the question
of accountability and even the specter of malicious out-and-out fraud
has been raised.
During an interview with Abrahams and Stephen Spoonamore, the CEO of
computer security firm Cyberinth LCC, on a radio program we co-hosted
yesterday , they suggested that an
FBI investigation may currently be under way in Maryland concerning
several events surrounding the use of Diebold machines in the state.
We've not yet had time to review the entire unredacted report as posted
below. However, given the importance of this never-before-released
information and after close consultation with Abrahams and several
others The BRAD BLOG feels the national public interest in the
information contained in this report requires full and immediate release
and disclosure.
The report, therefore, is released here for the first time
Please note that the version of the report released here has several
additional cover pages describing the report as "State of Maryland -
Electronic Voting System Security: Department of Budget and Management,
Annapolis, Maryland, September 17, 2003."
Nonetheless, the header on each page describes the document with a SAIC
tracking number, with a date of September 2, 2003, and contains the
title "Diebold AccuVote-TS Voting System and Processes Risk Assessment."
The publicly released redacted version ( also linked below for
comparison) has the same date and tracking number. The title for that
version is the same, but with "Redacted Final"added to the header.
As well, this version contains many unexplained strike-throughs,
additions, and rewrites. As Abrahams detailed in her Friday exclusive
, some of those edits were included in
the final redacted release version of the report, while other sections
were simply removed entirely. It is unclear as to who made the
suggested edits and additions seen in the version of the report we are
making available here.
Note also that there are several handwritten comments and marginalia
which were apparently made by Abrahams and others during their review of
the document and comparisons with the publicly released redacted version.
We discussed the issues of both the dates and the various edits with
Spoonamore this afternoon. He told us that he previously reviewed this
document "in great detail" in conjuction with Abrahams's initial report
.
As to its authenticity, since we are unable to get comment from the
state of Maryland, SAIC, or Diebold at this time, Spoonamore told us,
"The report is certainly a Diebold risk assessment for the state of
Maryland." He says that he "would give a 99% assessment that this
document is the real thing."
Spoonamore adds that the SAIC tracking number is an "authentic tracking
number for the state of Maryland and matches the sequence for mid-2003
assignment by SAIC."
With regard to the content of the report, Spoonamore, a Republican of 22
years, explained in our conversation late this afternoon, "There is no
one on that public commission [in Maryland] that has the skills to use
that document." After his review of the report, he says that "the real
value in this document is what it's not saying. It's clear that even
SAIC was not allowed to review the source code or the computer
interfaces" for the complete Diebold AccuVote-TS voting system.
Nonetheless, he says that the report clearly reveals that the security
in place in these systems is wholly inadequate **for the threats faced
when used during an election. That danger is one described this week
to the/ LA Times /
as "a matter of national security," by computer scientist David
Jefferson of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. He added, "The
legitimacy of government depends on getting elections right."
Jefferson served on the UC Berkeley panel convened by California Sec. of
State Bruce McPherson to study several aspects of the Diebold voting
system. That panel found more than 16 "serious vulnerabilities"in the
system last February before McPherson certified the systems for use in
California anyway. Jefferson continues to serve as one of the top
technical voting systems advisors to McPherson.
"Microsoft has admitted that the Windows operating system in use in
Maryland's Diebold voting systems is subject to at least 75,000 known
exploits," Spoonamore told us. "The unredacted version [of the SAIC
report] reveals that none of them have been defended against in these
Diebold machines."
Finally, as Abrahams reported last Friday, there is yet another report
commissioned by the State of Maryland to examine whether the items in
the SAIC report were adequately addressed. That report, completed by the
firm Freeman, Craft and McGregor a group which has come under fire
from Election Integrity advocates for its close relationship with the
voting machine companies such as Diebold has also never been released
to the public. We are told that we may soon be able to release that
report in full as well. Stay tuned.
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