An undisclosed romantic relationship, a secret data breach, payments to insiders, "dishonest" testimony, shortchanging injured prisoners — the Corizon bankruptcy just keeps getting wilder.
An undisclosed romantic relationship, a secret data breach, payments to insiders, "dishonest" testimony, shortchanging injured prisoners the Corizon bankruptcy just keeps getting wilder.
(Illustration by The Real Deal)
In 2018, the company that manages the Brooklyn condominium where cybersecurity expert Roman Sannikov lives was hacked.
The hacker locked down the property manager’s IT system and demanded the company pay a ransom to get back in. Sannikov, who leads a team of analysts scouring the dark web for intel on cybercrime and hacktivism, wasn’t personally affected by the breach; he pays his maintenance fees the old-fashioned way: by check. But as a member of the condo’s board, he had to notify residents and contend with the aftermath.
Yet Sannikov found that many of his neighbors simply shrugged off the news. “People didn’t pay attention to [it] as much as they should have,” he said.