NEW ORLEANS – U.S.
Attorney Peter G. Strasser announced that GARY PETER SIMON, JR., age 56, a
resident of Mandeville, Louisiana, was sentenced on May 19, 2020 to (3) three
years probation by United States District Judge Greg G. Guidry after previously
pleading guilty to intentionally accessing a protected computer without
authorization and recklessly causing damage resulting in loss of more than
$5,000 during one year, in violation of 18 U.S.C. '' 1030(a)(5)(B) and
1030(c)(4)(A). SIMON was also ordered to
perform 200 hours of unpaid community service, pay a $100 special assessment
fee, and restitution to the victim in the amount of $23,200.
According to court documents, The Strategic Petroleum
Reserve Office (SPRO) was a component of the Department of Energy that was
responsible for, among other things, overseeing and maintaining the readiness
of the United States’ stockpile of emergency crude oil, which was stored along
the coastline of the Gulf of Mexico. DOE
SPRO operated a restricted cloud-based computer system to handle a variety of
functions, including documenting daily activity. SIMON, who was employed as a contractor for
DOE SPRO from September 2007 until August 2018, worked in the Emergency
Management Directorate and was responsible for, among other things, IT
management of SPRO network applications.
He was one of two individuals who knew the username and password of the
Administrative Account.
After SIMON resigned from his contracting agency, in about
August 2018, he was no longer authorized to access the DOE SPRO computer
systems. Nevertheless, on about October
21, 2018, SIMON intentionally accessed the DOE SPRO cloud-based system remotely
without authorization. After SIMON
accessed the system, he altered and deleted various files. As a result of the intrusion and subsequent
manipulation of protected data, operators were unable to access their log views
on the computer system, and they could not annotate work they completed
electronically. The computer system
remained compromised for approximately 2-3 hours after the discovery of the
unauthorized access. Thereafter, SIMON used the account of a current SPRO
employee without that employee’s authorization, to make changes to log views
and to attempt to delete audit log files.
SIMON’S actions resulted in loss to the DOE, in the form of costs
associated with responding to the offense, conducting a damage assessment, and
restoring data, program, system, and information to its pre-offense condition,
in the amount of approximately $23,200.
U.S. Attorney Strasser praised the work of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation in investigating this matter. Assistant United States Attorney Jordan
Ginsberg, supervisor of the Public Corruption Unit, is in charge of the
prosecution.
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