The operator of the Colonial Pipeline learned it was in trouble at daybreak on May 7, when an employee found a ransom note from hackers on a control-room computer. By that night, the company’s chief executive came to a difficult conclusion: He had to pay.

Joseph Blount, CEO of Colonial Pipeline Co., told The Wall Street Journal that he authorized the ransom payment of $4.4 million because executives were unsure how badly the cyberattack had breached its systems or how long it would take to bring the pipeline back.

Mr. Blount acknowledged publicly for the first time that the company had paid the ransom, saying it was an option he felt he had to exercise, given the stakes involved in a shutdown of such critical energy infrastructure. The Colonial Pipeline provides roughly 45% of the fuel for the East Coast, according to the company.

“I know that’s a highly controversial decision,” Mr. Blount said in his first public remarks since the crippling hack. “I didn’t make it lightly. I will admit that I wasn’t comfortable seeing money go out the door to people like this.”

“But it was the right thing to do for the country,” he added.

This post first appeared on wsj.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Google to Ask Judge to End DOJ Antitrust Case

Tech District judge will hear arguments in landmark case over search-engine dominance…

Brazil Central Bank Raises Benchmark Lending Rate to 10.75%

SÃO PAULO—Brazil’s central bank raised its benchmark interest rate by 1.5 percentage…

Elon Musk’s Monster Week of Juggling Twitter, Tesla and SpaceX

Listen to article (2 minutes) Even by the standards of Elon Musk,…

Best Cyber Monday Dyson deals

Cyber Monday is officially here. And if you’re planning to invest in…