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Man indicted for planting 'logic bomb' in company's IT systems

IT administrator allegedly feared losing job after company reorg

December 20, 2006 12:00 PM ET

Computerworld - Facing a possible layoff from his job as an IT systems administrator, a 50-year-old New Jersey man was charged yesterday with planting malicious "logic bomb" code into the company systems where he worked that could have damaged more than 70 servers.

In a five-page indictment, Yung-Hsun Lin, also known as Andy Lin, 50, of Montville, N.J., was charged with two counts of intending to cause fraudulent, unauthorized changes to computer systems in violation of U.S. laws. Each count is punishable by up to 10 years in prison and up to a $250,000 fine. A federal grand jury handed down the indictment.

Lin was arrested yesterday by FBI agents and made an initial appearance before a federal magistrate. He is scheduled for arraignment on the indictment on Jan. 3.

In a statement, U.S. Attorney Christopher J. Christie in Newark alleged that Lin planted the logic bomb in HP Unix servers at Medco Health Solutions Inc. The bomb could have destroyed critical customer prescription data, payroll information and other records stored on more than 70 servers used by the Franklin Lakes, N.J.-based company.

Lin, who worked in Medco's Fair Lawn offices, apparently inserted the logic bomb into Medco's IT systems in October 2003 because he feared losing his job. Lin learned that his IT group was being merged with another group inside the company after it was spun off from pharmaceutical company Merck & Co., according to the indictment.

Instead, Lin was spared a layoff while four colleagues lost their jobs, according to the U.S. attorney's statement.

The government alleges that Lin then modified the inserted logic bomb code in November 2003, but that it was still scheduled to deploy on his birthday on April 23, 2004. Due to an error in the code, however, it didn't deploy as scheduled. In September 2004, Lin allegedly corrected the code error and changed the deployment date to April 23, 2005.

The plot was foiled, according to the government, when another Medco systems administrator, who was looking into an unrelated systems error, found the destructive code embedded within the systems scripts.

The administrator notified company security staffers, who removed the logic bomb in January 2005.

"The potential damage to Medco and the patients and physicians served by the company cannot be understated," Christie said in a statement. "A malicious program like this can bring a company's operations to a grinding halt and cause millions of dollars in damage from lost data, system downtime, recovery and repair."

"Companies and law enforcement must be extremely vigilant to guard against disgruntled employees with the knowledge and position to wreak such havoc," he said.



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