On December 7—less than a day after a mass shooting at Naval Air Station Pensacola—the city of Pensacola, Florida, was hit by what was originally described as a generic "cyber incident." A city spokesperson has since confirmed that ransomware had struck a number of the city's servers, taking down phones, email, electronic "311" service requests, and electronic payment systems.
With a population of 52,500 people, Pensacola is in Florida's Gulf Coast "panhandle." In addition to being the home of the US Navy's pilot training center, Pensacola is also, perhaps ironically, home of one of the training centers for the Navy's Information Warfare Training Command.
Pensacola public information spokesperson Kacee Lagarde said in a statement that the Pearl Harbor Day ransomware attack began in the early morning. Lagarde said:
As a result of the incident, Technology Resources staff disconnected computers from the city's network until the issue can be resolved... The City of Pensacola has remained operational throughout the incident, but some services have been impacted while the network is disconnected, including City emails, some city landlines, 311 customer service (311 can receive calls, but online services are not available) [and] online bill payments including Pensacola Energy and City of Pensacola Sanitation Services. Emergency dispatch services and 911 were not impacted and continue to operate normally.The attack's timing appears to be coincidental and not related to the killing of three sailors by a Saudi Air Force officer on December 6. And it follows the pattern of a number of recent Ryuk-based ransomware attacks on other state and local agencies. Ars reached out to Pensacola officials for more details on the attack but received no response—possibly because the city has just begun to restore email service to city workers with mobile devices.