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A Georgia man has been sentenced to federal prison in an unusual case in which he portrayed himself as a whistleblower while falsely reporting to authorities that a hospital worker committed criminal HIPAA violations.
On Tuesday, the Department of Justice said Jeffrey Parker of Rincon, Georgia, was sentenced to six months in prison after pleading guilty to one count of making false statements. Parker also was fined $1,200.
Prosecutors say Parker admitted that he “engaged in an intricate scheme” in October 2019 when he contacted the U.S. Justice Department, claiming that a former acquaintance who worked at an unidentified Savannah hospital had violated HIPAA s privacy provisions.
FBI Encounters: Reporting an Insider Security Incident to the Feds
Most insider incidents don t get reported to the FBI due to fear of debilitating business disruptions, public embarrassment, and screeching vans skidding into the parking lot to confiscate servers. But is that reality?
(image by ontronix, via Adobe Stock)
Despite stunning incident counts, many if not most insider threats remain unreported. Reasons vary but all bloom from the same stem: The victim company s fear of being harmed again, either by the legal system or law enforcement. But are those fears real and justified, or are they spun from myths? Time to take a look at what actually happens after a company contacts the FBI, formally or informally.