Bel-Air Soho Management Change
This post will be added to....please see previous message on "CPMI Ordered Out!"
I have now been told that upon takeover of the management after a second Court Order was presented, files and records have been deleted. Who has done this is not known at this time. If anyone has any information as to who may have destroyed this property, please report it to all three of these agencies: the police, the Justice Department and HLURB. Make a physical report to each of these agencies if you have any information on who may be responsible for the destruction of this property.
In the US, such property destruction may be civil and/or criminal infractions of the law. Property of Bel-Air would be considered private versus records of a government agency which would be public carrying, perhaps, different penalties. Given that turnover of the office took place under two Court Orders, I do not know if this is possible destruction of public or private property.
I will speak with a friend who has a Masters in computer security asking what steps need to be taken to secure the system. I encourage all Unit Owners to ask their management offices and Board of Directors what steps they are taking to protect files and records. Also, ask if the insurance policies cover purposeful destruction and other damage to records.
Why would anyone want to delete files or records?
I was sent the following comments by those who was also alerted to this situation:
First person: "XXX is erasing my mail. The court order sent to me the other day has vanished. It has happened before. Their friends in XXX do this for them. Be aware."
comment: I have spoken in the past with a friend about security. Everyone must have among the best anti-virus and anti-all abusive activity software sold. Update it every time you go online. Scan regularly! Passwords as I heard a computer expert state on the radio online must be at least 12 characters with numbers, symbols such as * and letters in upper and lower case. Current algorithms cannot break the password. Never store passwords on your computer. Never stay logged in and uncheck this at sites that have it automatically checked. Change passwords regularly. Never use the same password for each website. Do not create passwords with personal information.
Second person:
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