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“The February 2024 cyberattack on Change Healthcare—a subsidiary of United—exposed sensitive personal, financial, and health data such as social security numbers, birth dates, address, etc., all of which would be necessary to, say, change someone’s voter registration, etc.
I would be interested to know if the people who had their info stolen in that breach are the same individuals as the voters who reported missing ballots, duplicate ballots, their ballot already being counted despite them not having returned it, etc.
6. Thompson’s Connection to the Cyberattack
– Thompson’s role within UnitedHealth Group placed him in proximity to critical information related to the breach, and his upcoming deposition suggests he may have intended to share insights on its origins or implications.
– Such revelations could expose the potential scope of voter manipulation, implicate high-level individuals or organizations in election tampering. Preventing this disclosure would be a significant motive for silencing Thompson.
– Thompson’s decision to sell a significant portion of his stock in UnitedHealth Group on February 16th, 2024—just one day before the cyberattacks supposedly began on February 17th—raises serious questions about his knowledge of the impending breach. While stock sales by executives can be routine, the timing in this case aligns too closely with the attack to ignore. This suggests Thompson may have been aware of the breach beforehand, as well as its potential impact on the company’s stock price, prompting him to offload his shares in anticipation of a downturn.
– The cyberattack may have been deliberately timed to follow Thompson’s stock sale. If Thompson had insider knowledge of the breach’s origins or its intended effects, his stock sale could indicate an attempt to distance himself financially or ethically from the fallout. The timing could also potentially imply that the attackers, or those orchestrating the scheme, sought to leverage Thompson’s financial actions to implicate him as complicit in the breach so he would be less likely to speak up about it.
7. Potential Link to Donald Trump Via Stephen Parente
– Stephen Parente’s ties to UnitedHealth Group and his role in shaping healthcare policy during the Trump administration provide further context. Parente and Thompson collaborated during the COVID-19 pandemic on federal financial aid distribution systems for healthcare providers.
– In April 2017, President Donald Trump nominated Stephen T. Parente for the position of Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). However, his nomination stalled and eventually expired amid concerns over his financial disclosures. Parente initially omitted assets valued between $1 million and $5 million from his disclosure forms, raising questions about transparency and potential conflicts of interest. Additionally, his extensive ties to the healthcare industry, particularly with UnitedHealth Group—which provided a $1.2 million grant to a research center he directed—further complicated his nomination process. These ethical issues ultimately led to the expiration of his nomination without confirmation.”