Source: United States Department of Justice News
Deputy Attorney General (Deputy AG) Lisa O. Monaco traveled to San Francisco, California, and Aurora, Colorado this week to highlight the Justice Department’s forward-leaning approach to disrupting cyber threats and the weaponization of technology, and its efforts to root out sexual abuse at the Bureau of Prisons.
Deputy AG Monaco delivered an opening keynote at RSA Conference 2023, where she discussed the Justice Department’s pivot in its cyber strategy to prioritize near-term disruptions and victim protection. In a conversation moderated by Chris Krebs, the first director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), the Deputy AG emphasized that victim reporting has been integral to the success of disruptive law enforcement actions and stressed that true partnership involves the government and private industry working hand in hand, explaining: “We cannot get after these threats if we’re not working together.”
At the RSA Conference, Deputy AG Monaco also emphasized the Justice Department’s heightened focus on the emerging threat posed by adversaries abusing critical technology and data. Earlier in the day, she led a roundtable discussion, hosted by the Silverado Policy Accelerator, with legal, technology, and venture capital executives to discuss the Department’s partnership with private industry in these efforts, including through the newly created Disruptive Technology Strike Force, a multi-agency effort targeting illicit proliferation of critical technologies and hardening supply chains.
While in San Francisco, the Deputy AG also spoke at a gathering of cybersecurity officials from law enforcement agencies and governments around the world about the importance of strong cross-border collaboration to tackle the cyber threats of today and prepare for those of tomorrow.
In Colorado, Deputy AG Monaco addressed all wardens of the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) during their first in-person training since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. She commended the wardens for their dedication to BOP’s dual responsibility to provide safe and humane custodial conditions, and to ensure that those in custody return to their communities fully prepared to be good neighbors. The Deputy AG also echoed the importance of the BOP’s new mission statement announced today by Director Peters, which emphasizes safety, security, normalcy, and reentry.
Speaking during Sexual Assault Awareness month, the Deputy AG thanked the wardens for their commitment to the Department’s ongoing efforts to address sexual misconduct within the BOP. She stressed: “It is only by empowering Bureau officials, at every level, to report abuse; by setting a tone of respect and humanity from the top; by fostering a culture that does not tolerate even one instance of sexual abuse—only then can we make true progress in addressing this problem. Let me be clear: this is a top priority at the highest levels of the Department of Justice, and it must be a top priority for each of you.”
The Deputy AG also announced the creation of the Sexual Abuse Facility Evaluation & Review (SAFER) teams, which will visit women’s facilities in each of the BOP’s six regions to measure progress in implementing the more than 50 recommendations issued last November by a working group of senior Department officials reviewing the issue of sexual abuse at BOP facilities. The SAFER teams, comprised of members of the Department’s standing Advisory Group dedicated to the issue, will deploy over the coming weeks and engage directly with both BOP personnel and incarcerated individuals to ensure a safe environment for all.