IGP: Police will call Lowyat.net portal to help in organ donors’ data leak

IGP: Police will call Lowyat.net portal to help in organ donors’ data leak

He says it is 'baffling' that same website had also reported on earlier leak in personal data of mobile phone subscribers.

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KUALA LUMPUR: Police will be calling the administrators of Lowyat.net to assist in investigations into the latest leak on personal data of more than 220,000 organ donors in the country, said Inspector-General of Police Mohamad Fuzi Harun.

He said the probe by the Commercial Crime Investigation Department (CCID) found that the same website had also reported on a leak involving 56 million mobile phone subscribers’ data last year.

“What is baffling is that the same website had also reported on the earlier leak (on personal data of mobile phone subscribers). We are conducting further investigations into this matter.

“Police have cooperated with the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) in the previous case,” he told a press conference after his inaugural meeting with all Criminal Investigation Department (CID) chiefs and deputy chiefs of every police contingent here today.

Yesterday, Lowyat.net reported that personal details of over 220,000 organ donors and their next of kin had been leaked online, believed to have been stolen in September 2016.

The portal also claimed that the data was believed to have been stolen from government hospitals and the National Transplant Resource Centre nationwide and the leak also contained details of each organ donor’s nominated next of kin, taking the total number of data leak victims to 440,000.

Fuzi had earlier launched a Criminal Investigation Manual aimed at boosting the CID’s standard operating procedures (SOPs).

He said 14 police training centres across the country would use the manual as a guide for new investigating officers to complete their training.

In another development, Fuzi said the investigation papers on the transfer of Felda land in Jalan Semarak here will be submitted to the Attorney-General’s Chambers today.

“The investigation papers should have been submitted last week but there were a few things to look at and the investigation team finally completed it today,” he said.

The land transfer is believed to have occurred when Felda Investment Corporation (FIC) appointed a local company as the primary developer on June 3, 2014, and it was given full power of attorney to develop the land.

Report: Personal details of 220,000 organ donors leaked online

Over 46 million mobile numbers leaked online, says report

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