Some online records related to Pennsylvania State Police evidence lost: officials

Digital Brief: Jan. 23, 2024

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — State officials said Pennsylvania State Police are working to recover access to lost online records after a mistake was made during routine server maintenance earlier this month.

The mistake impacted records of how state police handled evidence and also affected the State Employees Retirement System, which said online users temporarily lost access to a member services system this month.

State officials downplayed the effect on the agencies.

Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro's Office of Administration blamed "human error" by a state employee who was performing routine server maintenance on Jan. 3. The office didn't elaborate, but said it was reviewing and updating internal information technology processes to prevent it from happening again.

The Patriot-News of Harrisburg/Pennlive.com first reported the matter.

Lost were records contained in a pair of applications that the state police use to manage evidence submissions and log evidence into police labs for testing, officials said. However, the Office of Administration said the physical evidence remains secure and was never endangered. The state police said the agency has recovered some of the records and is operating on a temporary system to track and receive evidence.

County prosecutors were notified of the missing records nearly two weeks ago.

Dauphin County's district attorney Fran Chardo told The Patriot-News of Harrisburg/Pennlive.com that his office keeps paper records of the data it stores on the state's server. Cumberland County's district attorney, Sean McCormick, said the county has its own forensic lab.

The retirement system said no pension data has been lost, although the agency earlier this month notified account users that it could not provide access to an online system that provides members with an up-to-date, albeit unofficial, snapshot of their benefit data.

Agency staff brought that service back online Jan. 16, although users had to verify their identity and create a new four-digit personal identification number, the agency said.

Users also lost pension calculations they had saved in their online member services account while some smaller agencies were told to re-enter any partially entered or unposted batches of personnel and payroll data, the agency said.

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