Current:Home > ContactA security problem has taken down computer systems for almost all Kansas courts -Trailblazer Capital Learning
A security problem has taken down computer systems for almost all Kansas courts
View
Date:2025-04-19 03:16:55
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Computer systems for almost all of Kansas’ courts have been offline for five days because of what officials call a “security incident,” preventing them from accepting electronic filings and blocking public access to many of their records.
Judicial branch officials still don’t know the extent of the problem or how long the computer systems will remain offline, spokesperson Lisa Taylor said Tuesday. The problem, discovered Thursday, meant the systems haven’t been able to accept electronic filings, process payments, manage cases, grant public access to records, allow people to file electronically for protection-from-abuse orders and permit people to apply electronically for marriage licenses.
Divorced parents who are supposed to receive child support from their ex-spouses are likely to see delays in the processing of their payments, the state Department for Children and Families also announced Tuesday.
The problems don’t affect courts in Johnson County in the Kansas City area, the state’s most populous county, because it operates its own computer systems. But state Supreme Court Chief Justice Marla Luckert last week directed the courts in the state’s 104 other counties to accept paper filings and filings by fax or mail, suspending a requirement that attorneys file electronically.
Wisconsin’s court system reported an attack by hackers in March, a cybersecurity threat briefly forced Alaska’s courts offline in 2021, and Texas’ top criminal and civil courts were hit with a ransomware attack in 2020. The International Criminal Court also reported what it called a “cybersecurity incident” in September.
But Taylor said Kansas court officials do not yet know whether its “security incident” was a malicious attack.
“It’s not just one system. It’s multiple systems that are all interconnected,” she said. “We’ve got the electronic filing, which is separate from the case management system, yet they they are connected in some way.”
Because courts have in recent years been keeping only digital copies of many records, those records won’t be accessible to the public with computer systems down, Taylor said.
A joint legislative committee that examines state computer issues expects to receive an update Wednesday on the court system’s problem, said its chair, state Rep. Kyle Hoffman, a Republican from western Kansas. He said it’s possible that the computer systems may be offline for several weeks.
“The more we go electronic like this, I just think the more that stuff like this is going to happen,” Hoffman said. “We’ve got to figure out how to safeguard it better.”
In Sedgwick County, home to the state’s largest city of Wichita, District Attorney Marc Bennett said his office worked over the past two decades to fully integrate its internal system for managing records with the local district court’s and state’s system.
Bennett said in an email to The Associated Press that his office still has its own records management system, but it will have to enter information used to track cases by hand. It averaged 69 criminal court hearings a day last year.
He said the integration of his office’s system with the courts’ allowed it to issue subpoenas automatically and verify information from other counties about defendants in Sedgwick County. He said the state court system’s problem is “a far, far bigger issue than the inconvenience of having to hand-file paper documents.”
“Even the mid-size counties do not all have a stand-alone records management system in the county attorney’s office to rely on like we do,” Bennett said. “They will be reduced to white boards or Excel spreadsheets to keep track of the dockets.”
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- China has stopped publishing daily COVID data amid reports of a huge spike in cases
- Perceiving without seeing: How light resets your internal clock
- Rihanna's Latest Pregnancy Photos Proves She's a Total Savage
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Native American Pipeline Protest Halts Construction in N. Dakota
- Today’s Climate: September 15, 2010
- Dakota Pipeline Was Approved by Army Corps Over Objections of Three Federal Agencies
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- A Record Number of Scientists Are Running for Congress, and They Get Climate Change
Ranking
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- You Didn't See It Coming: Long Celebrity Marriages That Didn't Last
- I-95 collapse rescue teams find human remains in wreckage of tanker fire disaster in Philadelphia
- Man charged with murder after 3 shot dead, 3 wounded in Annapolis
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Supreme Court won't review North Carolina's decision to reject license plates with Confederate flag
- 1 person dead after tour boat capsizes inside cave along the Erie Canal
- 13 Things You Can Shop Without Paying Full Price for This Weekend
Recommendation
Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
Judge Fails to Block Dakota Pipeline Construction After Burial Sites Destroyed
Mass. Court Bans Electricity Rate Hikes to Fund Gas Pipeline Projects
Clean Energy May Backslide in Pennsylvania but Remains Intact in Colorado
Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
Coal Lobbying Groups Losing Members as Industry Tumbles
Fewer abortions, more vasectomies: Why the procedure may be getting more popular
Kelly Osbourne Sends Love to Jamie Foxx as She Steps in For Him on Beat Shazam