US elections face security test as DHS cuts local cyber support

posted in: All news | 0

By Patrick Howell O’Neill, Bloomberg News

WASHINGTON — As voters across the U.S. from New York City to New Jersey and Virginia to California prepare to cast ballots Tuesday, election officials are operating with sharply reduced support from a federal government agency that had previously helped states and localities counter bomb threats and cyberattacks.

Related Articles


New York’s Jewish community divided, anxious as city faces potential first Muslim mayor


Justice Department defends Trump’s post as it urges judge to reject Comey’s effort to dismiss case


Republicans seek to tap into Trump energy on eve of Election Day in New Jersey, Virginia


DNC chair says wins in Virginia and New Jersey would signal 2026 blue wave


States and cities challenge Trump policy overhauling public service loan forgiveness

The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency has abandoned an Election Day situation room it had operated for years to share vital intelligence on physical and cyber threats with state and local authorities, said Paul Lux, chair of the Elections Infrastructure Information Sharing and Analysis Center, a national coalition of election officials.

CISA’s decision to end the information-sharing arrangement follows the dismantling of the agency’s election security team earlier this year. Remaining election personnel with CISA, a unit of the Department of Homeland Security, have since been prohibited from working with or contacting state election officials, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The cuts have sent state and local officials responsible for running elections searching for ways to shore up potential gaps in cybersecurity, threat monitoring and physical protection of polling places. Changes at Homeland Security are sinking in as the nation confronts a bitterly divided political climate marked by violent outbursts including the assassination of conservative commentator Charlie Kirk.

Americans will head to the polls on Tuesday to decide the winners of gubernatorial, mayoral and legislative races, as well as judicial seats and ballot initiatives. Election Day marks the first real test of the political landscape since Donald Trump’s return to the White House, offering an early glimpse of how his administration will oversee elections whose integrity he and his allies have repeatedly challenged. The New York City mayoral race, in particular, has drawn national attention as a proxy battle over urban governance, progressive politics and the future of the Democratic party.

Homeland Security officials continue to communicate and provide guidance to state and local personnel on other matters, according to an agency spokesperson.

“Under the leadership of President Trump and Secretary Noem, CISA has refocused on its core mission and leads the nation’s effort to secure critical infrastructure, and that includes election infrastructure from cyber and physical threats,” said DHS spokesperson Scott McConnell. “Every day, DHS and CISA are providing our partners the most capable and timely threat intelligence, expertise and resources they need to defend against risks.”

DHS officials forcibly reassigned or put on leave members of CISA’s election security and resilience team in the months after Trump returned to power in January, according to people familiar with the matter. The CISA team was charged with coordinating election security efforts among the more than 10,000 election jurisdictions throughout the U.S.

The federal government has historically taken a lead in uniting, informing, and enabling state and local election officials to secure elections. In February, CISA froze all election security activities and the department initiated a review of CISA’s role in helping state and local officials, Politico reported. Nine months later, the result has not been made public.

The loss of federal support is a “nasty shock” to election officials who have relied on federal support to fend off hackers and potentially violent plots, said Lux, who is also the supervisor of elections for Okaloosa County, Florida.

Meanwhile, Americans are reporting an increase in politically motivated violence, according to an October Pew Research Center poll. In one case, a Texas man was charged in September with making violent terroristic threats against New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani.

The reduction in election security services come amid deeper cuts resulting in reduced capacity for CISA’s Cybersecurity Division to provide services to critical infrastructure entities. Remaining capabilities, such as vulnerability scans and ransomware notifications, also are degraded in quality, according to former CISA officials.

“There are things important to the elections community that will be missing on this Election Day,” Lux said. “First and foremost, we have lost the ability to communicate on a national scale.”

During the 2024 election cycle, suspicious packages containing white powder were sent to election offices in more than a dozen states. CISA’s election security team at the time served as a national intelligence clearinghouse, sharing detailed reports with election officials including photos of the handwriting and envelopes. The crime was not solved.

Dozens of malicious and suspicious cyber incidents targeting American election infrastructure occurred in the weeks leading up to Election Day, including phishing attempts, denial of service attacks and more, according to Lux. The 2024 election also saw at least 227 bomb threats, according to the Brennan Center for Justice. CISA’s situation room had been where intelligence on the threats was collected and sent to election officials around the country.

The Trump administration also appointed people who have spread conspiracies about the 2020 election results to prominent positions. Heather Honey, who spread false information about the vote in Pennsylvania that year, has served as the deputy assistant secretary for election integrity in DHS’s Office of Strategy, Policy and Plans, according to an organizational chart on the department’s website.

Lux’s Elections Infrastructure Information Sharing and Analysis Center, or EI-ISAC, tried to set up its own national version of the situation room for this year’s election. The effort failed because the organization, which lost federal funding this year, couldn’t afford the software licensing fees required to collect and share data with so many partners nationally. Lux said he intends to ask DHS Secretary Kristi Noem to confirm whether the CISA situation room will return in time for the midterm elections next year. CISA didn’t respond to a request for comment on the matter.

EI-ISAC used to be a free program but, due to federal funding cuts, has been rolled into a larger paid membership with another information-sharing collective, Lux said. Major election jurisdictions can afford to have teams of cybersecurity professionals on staff. However, the demise of CISA’s free services and EI-ISAC’s new pricing model are expected to have an especially big impact on smaller and poorer jurisdictions.

That makes election offices with less funding particularly vulnerable to state-backed hackers from China, Russia and Iran, officials said. Attackers from each of those countries have previously sought to interfere in U.S. elections.

“It’s those small, underserved jurisdictions which are the bigger concern because they are the least prepared to deal with it,” Lux said.

©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Visit bloomberg.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Gophers add speedy Missouri receiver Braiden Stevens to recruiting class

posted in: All news | 0

The Gophers football program picked up a commitment Monday from speedy wide reciever Braiden Stevens for its 2026 recruiting class.

The three-star prospect from Platte County High School in Platte City, Mo., was committed to South Dakota State before the U, Nebraska, West Virginia and others offered scholarships this fall.

Stevens, who is listed at 5-foot-8 and 165 pounds, took an official visit to Minnesota for the 23-20 overtime win over Michigan State on Saturday.

Stevens, who also participates in track and field, is known for his speed, which is presumed to be in the range of 4.4 seconds in the 40-yard dash and 10.4 in the 100-meter dash.

Stevens is the 25th commitment in the U’s class for next season. He comes aboard after Utah receiver Kai Meza left the class in September and then pledge to California.

Related Articles


Controversy? Michigan State coach Jonathan Smith responds to late calls


Gophers escape with 23-20 overtime win over Michigan State


Gophers to be without running back Darius Taylor vs. Michigan State


Frustrated by stagnation, Mark Coyle puts more money into Gophers men’s basketball


Gophers football vs. Michigan St.: Keys to game, how to watch, who has edge

Man accused in a series of 1980s rapes in Florida is convicted in another attack

posted in: All news | 0

MIAMI (AP) — A man suspected of being the “pillowcase rapist” in a string of South Florida rapes back in the 1980s was convicted Monday in another one of the attacks.

Related Articles


Microsoft $9.7 billion deal with IREN will give it access to Nvidia chips


OpenAI and Amazon sign $38 billion deal for AI computing power


Donna Jean Godchaux-MacKay, Grateful Dead singer, dies at 78


Courts order ICE not to deport man who spent 43 years in prison before murder case overturned


First clinical trial of pig kidney transplants gets underway

Miami-Dade County jurors found Robert Koehler, 66, guilty of sexual battery, kidnapping and burglary after deliberating for less than two hours. His sentencing is scheduled for Nov. 24.

Monday’s conviction involves a woman who was 22 years old in 1984 when someone broke into her southwest Miami-Dade County home and raped her. Koehler was sentenced to 17 years in prison nearly three years ago for a similar attack on a 25-year-old woman in 1983.

Authorities say the “pillowcase rapist” terrified his victims by breaking into their homes at night. The attacker used a pillowcase or other fabric to cover his face — or the faces of his victims — before assaulting them, tying them up and stealing from their homes.

The assaults attracted extensive media attention in South Florida and authorities created a task force to investigate. The trail had turned cold until 2020, when authorities say a DNA hit for one of Koehler’s relatives led police to him.

Prosecutors have said they’ve connected Koehler’s DNA to at least 25 attacks, but there could be more than 40 victims.

Mizutani: J.J. McCarthy is just scratching surface for Vikings

posted in: All news | 0

The scene of quarterback J.J. McCarthy being mobbed by his teammates after barging into the visitor’s locker room on Sunday afternoon at Detroit’s Ford Field perfectly encapsulates how the Vikings seem to feel about their young signal caller.

The genuine happiness his teammates displayed in that moment is impossible to fake.

Though he has missed his fair share of games due to injuries to start his career, McCarthy has carried himself in a way that has instilled belief across the organization. That feeling existed long before he played a starring role in the Vikings scoring a 27-24 win over the Detroit Lions.

The most encouraging part of McCarthy’s performance while leading the Vikings to the upset? The fact that he wasn’t satisfied in the immediate aftermath.

“I’m not proud,” McCarthy said. “I feel like I could’ve played a lot better.”

It’s a promising sign that McCarthy already understands that he won’t be able to get by simply on vibes alone. A sense of swagger only goes so far at the highest level. The ability to string completions together is the key to having sustained success.

That’s still a work in progress.

After getting the Vikings off to a fast start against the Lions, for example, McCarthy rode the roller coaster for prolonged stretches.

He wasn’t accurate enough while completing 14 of 25 passes for 143 yards, a pair of touchdowns and an interception. He also held on to the ball for too long and took a handful of sacks as a result.

“There’s a lot of meat left on the bone,” McCarthy said. “We have to go back to work and make sure we correct all the little things.”

That starts with McCarthy continuing to operate in the rhythm and timing of the offense. He has had success when he has been able to hit his back foot and let it rip. He has gotten himself into trouble when he has tried to freelance outside of the pocket.

That was a point that head coach Kevin O’Connell hammered home as he detailed some of the highs and lows that McCarthy most recently put on tape.

“His poise in running the show I thought was matched by him making some big throws,” O’Connell said. “There are always going to be some things that we can go back and correct.”

As he went over some of the plays stood out to him, O’Connell acknowledged both sides of the spectrum matter in McCarthy’s development.

The good? There was the frozen rope to receiver Jordan Addison near the sideline that showcased the lower body mechanics McCarthy has been working on in practice.

There was also the touch pass to running back Aaron Jones that provided anecdotal evidence to McCarthy that he doesn’t necessarily need to throw every ball 100 mph.

The bad? There was the few missed opportunities to Justin Jefferson that brought to light what happens when McCarthy gets paralyzed with thought and fails to pull the trigger. There was also the misfire to receiver Jalen Nailor that might have gone for a touchdown if McCarthy led him into open space.

“There were some real elements of quarterback play, and then, in moments where maybe it got loose, or we can tighten things up, that’s what we’re here for,” O’Connell said. That’s all part of the journey he’s on.”

Maybe the most interest sequence that O’Connell highlighted was McCarthy going through his progression and checking down to Jones near the line of scrimmage. He brought that up to illuminate the importance of not forcing the issue.

As for the perfect back shoulder fade that McCarthy uncorked to Nailor to put the game on ice? The fact that O’Connell trusted McCarthy enough to let him throw in that situation spoke volumes.

“That’s who he is,” O’Connell said. “He made the play and won the game.”

That’s why with McCarthy leading the charge the sky still feels like the limit for the Vikings.

Related Articles


Takeaways from the Vikings’ 27-24 win over the Lions


How a team meeting in Detroit helped the Vikings turn it around


Shipley: With one big win, all things seem possible again for Vikings


J.J. McCarthy returns and leads Vikings to upset win over Lions


The Loop Fantasy Football Update Week 9: Last-minute moves