Three top cybersecurity officials are reportedly leaving the fbi

Three top cybersecurity officials are reportedly leaving the fbi


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Scott Smith, assistant director of the FBI's Investigation Cyber Division, testifies during a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing in Dirksen Building on cyber-attack defense on


October 19, 2017.  Tom Williams | CQ-Roll Call Group | Getty Images Three top cybersecurity officials at the FBI are stepping down, The Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar


with the matter. The departures come at a particularly sensitive time for cybersecurity concerns in the U.S. as special counsel Robert Mueller investigates Russian interference in the 2016


election and top intelligence officials warn of continued Kremlin attempts to attack the American election system. The Journal reported that David Resch, a cybersecurity head in the agency’s


division that handles investigating financial crime and organized crime; Scott Smith, assistant FBI director and head of the Bureau’s cyber division; and Smith’s deputy, Howard Marshall,


have either already departed or will leave within the month. Carl Ghattas and Jeffrey Tricoli, senior agents responsible for national security investigations including elections security,


departed the bureau earlier this year, the Journal has also reported. The moves are a contrast to yesterday’s Justice Department press conference, where Deputy Attorney General Rod


Rosenstein, a frequent target of congressional Republicans critical of the special counsel's probe, discussed wide-ranging cyber-initiatives spearheaded by the FBI. Rosenstein oversees


Mueller's investigation. According to Rosenstein’s report, the FBI is trying to increase outreach to private companies, work with social media firms to tamp down foreign influence


campaigns and address security problems in elections infrastructure, among several pressing initiatives. The FBI didn't immediately respond to CNBC's request for comment about the


cybersecurity officials' departures. Read the full WSJ report here. __