Washington
U.S.
Senator
Tim
Scott
questioned
former
Equifax
CEO
Richard
Smith
this
morning
regarding
Equifax’s
security
breach
that
left
the
personal
information
of
millions
of
Americans
vulnerable,
as
well
as
the
behavior
of
Equifax
executives
after
the
breach
was
found.
Three
Equifax
executives
sold
$1.8
million
of
company
stock
in
the
days
following
the
breach,
while
the
American
people
were
not
told
of
the
breach
for
six
weeks.
Senator
Scott
highlighted
the
timeline
below
- On
July
29,
suspicious
activity
was
reported
within
Equifax
- On
August
1,
three
Equifax
executives
sold
off
stock
totaling
$1.8
million
- On
September
7,
six
weeks
later,
Equifax
told
the
public
about
the
breach
- Equifax
stock
plummets
from
an
August
1
price
of
$142.46
to
$92.98
a
shareby
September
14
- This
drop
means
the
Equifax
executives
made
an
extra
$655,000
by
selling
within
days
of
the
breach
- In
total,
Equifax
lost
$6.4
billion
of
value
after
the
breach
was
made
public
- Today,
former
Equifax
CEO
Richard
Smith
testified
that
executives
had
no
knowledge
of
the
breach
when
they
sold
their
stock
Senator
Scott
asked
Mr.
Smith:
“Folks
who
have
stocks
in
Equifax,
like
the
mom
and
pop
business
that
are
saving
for
the
future
bore
the
burden
of
a
$6.4
billion
lost
in
value.
At
the
same
time,
the
General
Counsel
who
“didn’t
know”,
the
CFO
who
“didn’t
know”
all
the
folks
in
the
executive
suite
who
had
no
clue,
they
were
the
luckiest
investors
on
August
1,
to
net
$655,000
this
was
pure
luck,
and
nothing
else.
Was
it
luck?”
Scott
continued
“I
will
say
that
what
you
guys
want
us
to
believe
as
a
committee,
as
Senators,
as
the
U.S.
Congress,
as
well
as
the
investors
in
Equifax
and
the
entire
nation,
what
y’all
want
us
to
believe
is
that
the
three
luckiest
investors
who
sold
their
stock
did
so
without
any
knowledge
that
the
suspicious
activity
(reported
July
29th)
may
be
bigger
than
any
suspicious
activity
in
the
history
of
the
company
I
find
that
hard
to
believe.”
You
can
watch
video
of
Senator
Scott’s
questioning
by
clicking
here
or
on
the
image
below.

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