The station quickly assured viewers that “there is no
emergency” and says “our engineers are investigating to determine what
happened.”
According to the Great Falls Tribune, the fake emergency alert was issued during afternoon programming on KRTV, a CBS affiliate. The station says the hacking came from an outside source and station officials are working to find out how this happened.
According to the Great Falls Tribune, the fake emergency alert was issued during afternoon programming on KRTV, a CBS affiliate. The station says the hacking came from an outside source and station officials are working to find out how this happened.
The alert featured a scrolling warning for various Montana counties and a
voice-over claimed there were “dead bodies rising from the grave and attacking
the living” and urged people to use caution.
“Do not attempt to approach or apprehend these bodies as
they are extremely dangerous,” it went on to say.
Lt. Shane Sorensen with the GFPD said he’s not sure yet what
sort of penalties a person faces, if any, in Montana for hacking into an emergency alert
system. But he said the police department did receive phone calls from people
who were concerned after they saw the message.
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