Content

No Brownie points after thief makes off with Denver-area Girl Scouts personal data

Where did the breach take place? Girl Scouts Mile Hi Council of Denver.

How many victims? About 49,000 Girl Scout members, many ages 5 to 18.

What kind of personal information? Names, addresses, telephone numbers, emergency contact information, place of employment, parent's workplace, school names, ages, custodial care information, ethnicity and camp and meeting locations. A separate file contained a limited number - 1,000 or fewer - of Social Security and credit card numbers.

What happened? A thief broke into a car containing back-up tapes that were planning to be transported to a storage facility.

What was the response? The council is notifying those parties whose Social Security and credit numbers were contained in the tapes.

Details: Police have advised the council that they do not believe the thief targeted the data considering he or she also stole change and sunglasses, not the sign of a "sophisticated" criminal. Authorities believe the suspect stole a carrying case containing the tapes because he or she thought it contained a laptop. Also, accessing the data on the tapes requires specific knowledge and equipment. Still, the council plans to review its security policies in an attempt to prevent a similar incident in the future.

Quote: "It looks very opportunistic in nature," council spokeswoman Amanda Kalina said of the theft.

Source: "Statement about stolen computer back-up tapes," Girl Scouts Mile Hi Council website, June 29; SCMagazineBlogs.com interview, July 11.

Get daily email updates

SC Media's daily must-read of the most current and pressing daily news

By clicking the Subscribe button below, you agree to SC Media Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

You can skip this ad in 5 seconds