The Toledo Blade Online
The Toledo Blade OnlineThe Toledo Blade Green Edition
Click here to subscribe or renew!
Temp: 16°
Humidity: 79%
Wednesday, 02/10/10
Click Here Click Here Click Here Click Here Click Here
Home »   Latest News »   State » 

Click to Receive RSS Feeds!EmailPrint IndexHelp FacebookTwitterDiggDel.icio.usFark

Article published July 26, 2007
STOLEN TAPE
Intern says he's now Ohio data theft 'scapegoat'
Fired student ends his silence

COLUMBUS - The college intern at the center of the computer tape furor that could ultimately cost Ohio taxpayers more than $2 million broke his silence yesterday, saying he's been made the state's "scapegoat."

"I was put through a grueling three-hour polygraph test, numerous interviews with various investigators, and countless phone calls," Jared Ilovar, 22, said in a written statement.

"For the record I was never involved in the theft of the tape and the investigators came to the same conclusion," he said. "I was a victim of a random car theft, and now I am the scapegoat for the state of Ohio."

He could not be reached for additional comment.

Gov. Ted Strickland fired Mr. Ilovar on Friday when he refused to resign following the release of an Ohio inspector general report that spread the blame from the carelessness of an intern who left the data tape in his car to bad decisions made by those higher up the chain of command.

Mr. Strickland also accepted the resignation of David L. White, project manager for the $158 million Ohio Administrative Knowledge System, terminated the contracts of two highly paid computer consultants, and initiated disciplinary proceedings against two other state employees.

Mr. Ilovar said he considered his internship working on the state's massive new payroll and purchasing system to be "an opportunity of a lifetime" and was hoping it would lead to a full-time job after he graduates from DeVry University in March.

He said he hoped Mr. Strickland would consider giving him another chance. There will be no such offer.

"I've tried to be sensitive of the young man and protective of him as a matter of fact," said Mr. Strickland. "I don't have ill feelings toward him. I wish him well. This set of circumstances is unfortunate, but I have not blamed him for any decision-making that led to this. I've said I didn't think it was appropriate for an intern to be given this responsibility, but I don't think he's being made the scapegoat," he said. "Others were terminated."

Mr. Ilovar said he was given no instructions on how to handle the backup storage tape once he carried it from his work station to his car beyond being told to "bring these back tomorrow."

"I was the newest person in the door so I inherited the job of taking the data tapes out of the building," he said. "That was the extent of my instructions."

He said he was unaware until after the theft that the state had a policy dating back to 2002 requiring a network administrator to take the tape home as a security measure in the event some disaster damaged the original data. Instead, interns had been routinely taking home one of two backup tapes created nightly, and those interns passed the task onto him.

The policy has since been changed so that the tapes remain in government buildings.

The state has reviewed the tape's on-site twin and determined it contains names, Social Security numbers, and in some cases bank-account information for 1.1 million individuals and businesses.

The state has maintained specialized equipment and knowledge would be needed to access the data, but it has offered a year of taxpayer-financed identify-theft monitoring to the individuals affected.

Mr. Ilovar said three members of the Strickland administration, including two of his superiors and an attorney, "strong-armed" him into signing a letter of resignation that he later rescinded.

Mr. Strickland said he talked yesterday with the three individuals who were in the room and said he is satisfied that the intern was not strong-armed. "He may interpret being told that he would have the option of resigning or being terminated as being strong-armed, but I see it as a statement of fact" he said. "It was a decision I had made after reading the inspector general's report."

He said the same offer led to Mr. White's resignation.

Mr. Strickland said he was concerned when Mr. Ilovar told investigators that he took the tape inside his apartment about 85 percent of the time. On the night of June 10 or early June 11, his car, which he insisted was locked, was broken into and the tape stolen.

"I wasn't aware that I was making any mistakes," said Mr. Ilovar. "Given the fact that I took the tapes out of the building every night and brought them back every day, how was that making a mistake? Remember my instructions from a fellow intern were 'bring these [tapes] back tomorrow.' "

Contact Jim Provance at: jprovance@theblade.com or 614-221-0496.


Permanent Link

Blade Area
Updated: 6:18 pm
Weather check, radar and roads
RADAR / FORECAST / CAMS >>
Nation/World
Updated: 6:18 pm
Cribs recalled after 3 deaths >>
State
Updated: 6:18 pm
Weather-related crashes kill 2 on Michigan freeways >>
Accidents/Vehicular
Updated: 6:17 pm
U.S. 24 traffic rerouted, I-75 backed up >>
Blade Area
Updated: 6:17 pm
Toledo officials given raises up to 26.9% >>
Nation/World
Updated: 5:39 pm
Transport Canada offers to buy Ambassador Bridge >>
More news stories
 



click here!

ADVERTISING SECTIONS
Tom Henry
Updated: 7:13 am
Playing the odds can help mitigate disasters >>

S. Amjad Hussain
Updated: 5:53 am
France draws line over Muslim women’s dress >>

Marilou Johanek
Updated: 5:54 am
Sense of superiority drove church to 'help' Haitian children >>

Jack Kelly
Updated: 5:42 am
As Democrats schmooze, Obama’s credibility slides  >>

Jack Lessenberry
Updated: 5:32 am
Granholm failed to make case in last Michigan address >>

Rose Russell
Updated: 6:09 am
Even in South Africa, pols' private affairs are people's business >>

David Shribman
Updated: 9:37 am
Love means never saying budget deficit >>

Mike Sigov
Updated: 12:31 pm
Russia's president brings little to the table >>

Tom Walton
Updated: 5:40 am
Apologies in politics are unprecedented >>

More columnist stories
MOST READ STORIES
MOST E-MAILED STORIES
1.  Tennis champ accused of phone harassment
2.  Toledo strip club puts cover charge into quake relief
3.  Mental health agency looks to pare $3.5M from services
4.  Homelessness board votes for outside audit; advocate Ken Leslie safe for now
5.  Sylvania lawyer charged in thefts from 2 clients
6.  'Stagecoach Mary' broke barriers of race, gender
7.  MAC basketball struggles with fall from elite
8.  Students, staff navigate Perrysburg High School halls in wheelchairs
9.  Ohio Highway Patrol trooper killed in Wyandot County
10.  Lucas, Fulton residents are fined for burning


AP  News Headlines



AP  Business Headlines



AP  Sports Headlines


AP  Features Headlines
Copyright 2010 The Blade. By using this service, you accept the terms of our privacy statement and our visitor agreement. Please read them.
The Toledo Blade Company, 541 N. Superior St., Toledo, OH 43660, (419) 724-6000
To contact a specific
department or an individual person, click here.
The Toledo Times ®