STRAGE DI OMAGH. FILES ON LINE PER ERRORE

Law firm puts Omagh bomb files online by mistake (BBC News NI)
A English law firm has apologised to some of the victims of the Omagh bombing after an information breach saw sensitive documents uploaded on to the internet.
H2O Law has been representing some of the victims of the 1998 atrocity.
The documents were placed on a server which was not secure and open to the public.
Some of the files included lengthy medical and psychological reports, and information from Garda witnesses.
The files were taken down after the law firm was contacted by the Irish Times last Thursday.
The paper agreed not to publish details until the documents, and “cached” copies, were removed from the internet.
Michael Gallagher, from the Omagh Families Support Group, told BBC Radio Ulster that it was “very, very worrying”.
“At the moment we don’t know the quantity or the extent of the information,” he said.
“I am quite happy and confident that the police have taken control of this investigation and we just hope that they will be in the position to tell us the amount of material that has been on the net and who did access it when it was there.
“It is a small comfort that not everybody is going to go in every day and have a look at this sort of material but I think the fact that somebody, either unintentionally or deliberately, attacked their computer system is worrying.”
On Friday, a Belfast judge confirmed the civil retrial of two men being sued over the 1998 Omagh bombing.
Mr Justice Gillen said he was setting aside up to six weeks in October to hear the case against Colm Murphy and Seamus Daly.
Twenty-nine people, including a woman pregnant with twins, were killed when a Real IRA bomb exploded in the County Tyrone town on 15 August 1998.

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