Skip navigation

Report: Obama helicopter security breached

Pa. company says blueprints for Marine One found at Iran IP address

Video
  Will costs ground new presidential chopper?
March 1: The state-of-the-art upgrade to Marine One was approved during the Bush administration, but may be in danger due to mounting costs. NBC’s Lisa Myers reports.

Nightly News

Video
  U.S. security breach in Iran?
March 1: A U.S. technology company has reportedly found blueprints for President Obama's helicopter on a computer in Iran. MSNBC's Alex Witt reports.

MSNBC

Video: White House  
  
Security tightens for Obama's arrival
Dec. 9: City workers in Oslo have welded manhole covers closed and thousands of police officers from around the country are in place to increase security for President Obama's arrival. Msnbc.com's Keva Andersen reports.

  Tweets from inside the Beltway

  1. Loading the latest posts…

Click here for more tweets from NBC's D.C. bureau.

Interactive
Explore a 3-D White House
Check out historical info, photos, and panoramic images.
White House visitor logs
Image: The White House
Public records
Help figure out who has been visiting the White House during the first eight months of the Obama administration.
NBC News and msnbc.com
updated 11:07 a.m. ET March 1, 2009

A company that monitors peer-to-peer file-sharing networks has discovered a potentially serious security breach involving President Barack Obama's helicopter, NBC affiliate WPXI in Pittsburgh reported Saturday.

Employees of Tiversa, a Cranberry Township, Pa.-based security company that specializes in peer-to-peer technology, reportedly found engineering and communications information about Marine One at an IP address in Tehran, Iran.

Bob Boback, CEO of Tiversa, told WPXI-TV: "We found a file containing entire blueprints and avionics package for Marine One, which is the president's helicopter."

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

The company was able to trace the file back to its original source.

"What appears to be a defense contractor in Bethesda, Md., had a file-sharing program on one of their systems that also contained highly sensitive blueprints for Marine One," Boback said.

Tiversa also found sensitive financial information about the cost of the helicopter on that same computer, WPXI-TV reported.

Someone from the company most likely downloaded a file-sharing program, typically used to exchange music, not realizing the potential problems, Boback said.

"When downloading one of these file-sharing programs, you are effectively allowing others around the world to access your hard drive," Boback said.

Retired Gen. Wesley Clark, an adviser to Tiversa, said the company discovered exactly which computer the information came from. "I'm sure that person is embarrassed and may even lose their job, but we know where it came from and we know where it went."

Boback said the government was notified immediately.

Iran is not the only country that appears to be accessing this type of information through file-sharing programs, Boback told the station.

"We've noticed it out of Pakistan, Yemen, Qatar and China. They are actively searching for information that is disclosed in this fashion because it is a great source of intelligence," Boback said.

Clark told WPXI that he doesn't know how sensitive this information is, but he said other military information has been found on the Internet in the past and should be monitored more closely.

Rep. Jason Altmire, D-Pa., said he would ask Congress to investigate how to prevent this from happening again.

© 2009 msnbc.com  Reprints

Sponsored links

Resource guide