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US healthcare org pays $11M settlement over alleged cybersecurity lapses. Health Net Federal Services (HNFS) and its parent company, Centene Corporation, have agreed to pay $11,253,400 to settle allegations that HNFS falsely certified compliance with cybersecurity requirements under its Defense Health Agency (DHA) TRICARE contract. The U.S. government contracted HNFS to provide managed healthcare support services for TRICARE's North region, covering 22 states. The contract required compliance with cybersecurity standards, specifically 48 C.F.R. § 252.204-7012 and 51 security controls from NIST Special Publication 800-53 (Security and Privacy Controls for Federal Information Systems and Organizations). According to a U.S. Department of Justice announcement, between 2015 and 2018, HNFS allegedly failed to implement the required cybersecurity measures while administering health benefits for American military service members and their families. At the same time, the DOJ claims HNFS falsely certified compliance in their reports to the DHA, making it appear as if they adequately safeguarded people's data, although they didn't. Specifically, HNFS has failed to take the following measures: In the settlement agreement document, the U.S. state explains that HNFS falsely attested compliance on at least three occasions: on November 17, 2015, on February 26, 2016, and on February 24, 2017. HNFS and Centene deny all allegations and maintain that no data breaches or loss of servicemember information occurred. However, they still agreed to pay $11,253,400 to settle the allegations. The legal document clarifies that the settlement does not protect HNFS and Centene from criminal liability if additional evidence, administrative penalties, or civil actions emerge in the future.

Daily Brief Summary

CYBERCRIME // Health Org Settles for $11M Over Cybersecurity Non-compliance

Health Net Federal Services and parent company Centene Corporation agreed to an $11.25 million settlement over alleged cybersecurity lapses.

The settlement resolves claims that HNFS falsely certified its compliance with critical cybersecurity standards mandated by a TRICARE contract from the Defense Health Agency.

HNFS was accused of not implementing required cybersecurity measures while managing health benefits for U.S. military service members and their families across 22 states.

The allegations include false certifications of compliance submitted on three separate occasions between 2015 and 2017.

Despite the settlement, HNFS and Centene denied all allegations and asserted that no actual data breaches or loss of servicemember information occurred.

The settlement does not exempt HNFS and Centene from future criminal liability, additional evidence, administrative penalties, or civil actions related to these allegations.