While the defendant, Francis G. Janosko, was incarcerated in Massachusetts at the Plymouth County Correctional Facility in late 2006 and early 2007, he was allowed to use a computer system provided to inmates for legal research. Although the equipment was set up to confine access solely to legal materials, Janosko managed to circumvent the limits and, among other havoc, gain entrance for himself and others into the Facility’s personnel files, which contained Social Security numbers of some 1,100 current and prior employees and other personal information about them. The ensuing indictment included charges of causing damage to a protected computer, 18 U.S.C. § 1030(a)(5)(A)(i), thereby causing loss to one or more persons, id. § 1030(a)(5)(B)(i), and damage affecting a computer system used in the administration of justice, id. § 1030(a)(5)(B)(v). Janosko pleaded guilty under an agreement that left any amount of restitution to be determined by the court, which awarded the county $4,309 for the cost of purchasing elements of the system needed to replace those damaged by Janosko and retained as evidence, and $6,600 for the cost of monitoring credit records of the individuals who suffered the privacy violations and consequent risk of identity theft.
Janosko objected to the order to reimburse for the credit enquiries, arguing that they did not proximately result from the acts of damaging the computer and computer system. Before us, the defendant adds the further objection that the government failed to show that the credit checks were made close enough in time to the destructive conduct to qualify for restitution. We find the objections meritless. 1
Janosko is entirely correct that the cost of the credit monitoring is not what the statute defining the crimes calls “damage to a protected computer,” § 1030(a)(5)(A)(i), or “damage affecting a computer system,” § 1030(a)(5)(B)(v). 2 But Janosko pleaded guilty not only to causing such “damage” but also to causing “loss” by his damaging conduct, § 1030(a)(5)(B)(i). The near juxtaposition of “loss” to “damage” inflicted on items or systems of equipment indicates some broader concept of forbidden effect and consequent scope of restitution.
In fact, 18 U.S.C. § 1030(e)(ll) defines loss to include “any reasonable cost to any victim, including the cost of responding to an offense” in addition to the cost of damage assessment, restoration of the damaged system and consequential damage like lost revenue. By thus exemplifying “loss” as an element of one of the offenses charged against Janosko, a “reasonable cost ... of responding” goes hand in hand with the terms of the restitution statute. The Mandatory Victims Restitution Act mandates restitution to the victim (here, without dispute, at least the county)
It should go without saying that an employer whose personnel records have been exposed to potential identity thieves responds reasonably when it makes enquiry to see whether its employees have been defrauded. This act of responsibility is foreseeable to the same degree that indifference to employees’ potential victimization would be reproachable. It is true, of course, that once they were told of the security breach, the individual employees and former workers involved in this case could themselves have made credit enquiries to uncover any fraud, but this in no way diminishes the reasonableness of the Facility’s investigation prompted by the risk that its security failure created. And quite aside from decency to its workers, any employer would reasonably wish to know the full extent of criminality when reporting the facts to law enforcement authorities.
Nor do we see anything helpful to Janosko in his argument that the government failed to present evidence that the credit check was reasonably timely, as
Vaknin
held it must be.
Affirmed.
Notes
. We review orders of restitution for. abuse of discretion, but apply
de novo
review to legal questions associated with restitution orders.
See United States v. Innarelli,
. The statute has been amended since the period of the offenses by the Identity Theft Enforcement and Restitution Act of 2008, Pub.L. No. 110-326, § 204, 122 Stat. 3560, 3561-62. References are to the text before the 2008 changes.
. When the case was argued, neither lawyer knew when the county had made the credit
