The United States House Energy and Commerce Committee has handed down another five subpoenas to individuals who were potentially involved in Hewlett-Packard’s (HP) controversial investigation into the sources of sensitive company information leaked to media outlets, just one day before the committee is set to convene to discuss the ongoing scandal, The Wall Street Journal reports.The news comes from a “person close to the investigation,” according to the Journal.The five newly subpoenaed individuals are thought to be subcontractors for Action Research Group, a Florida-based data broker employed by HP to find telephone records and electronic communications of board members, employees and journalists, according to the Journal. HP used both physical and e-mail tracking to obtain such records.The five individuals that recently received subpoenas were identified by the source close to the probe as Bryan Wagner, a Colo. Man; Darren Brost of Texas; Charles Kelly, a Ga. resident; Cassandra Selvage, of Fla.; and Valerie Preston, also of Fla., the Journal reports. According to a separate Journal report, a source close to the investigation said Wagner told an investigator in Colo. that he had recently destroyed his computer using a hammer and threw away the pieces.The unraveling scandal at the PC giant has already sparked the resignation of its Chairman Patricia Dunn, a public apology from Chief Executive Mark Hurd, and House subpoenas to various company officials—including both Dunn and Hurd—to appear at the House hearing on Thursday. Larry Sonsini, a HP attorney, has also received a subpoena to appear before the House, and on Friday, a security official tendered his resignation after being subpoenaed. The United States Department of Justice and the Calif. attorney general are also investigating HP’s use of “pretexting”—or the impersonation of individuals to obtain records—in an effort to dig up information on people it suspected of involvement in the media leaks.Keep checking in at our HP Spying Scandal page for more coverage of this unfolding story.Keep checking in at our CSO Security Feed page for updated news coverage.-Compiled by Al Sacco Related content news Multibillion-dollar cybersecurity training market fails to fix the supply-demand imbalance Despite money pouring into programs around the world, training organizations have not managed to ensure employment for professionals, while entry-level professionals are finding it hard to land a job By Samira Sarraf Oct 02, 2023 6 mins CSO and CISO Technology Industry IT Training news Royal family’s website suffers Russia-linked cyberattack Pro-Russian hacker group KillNet took responsibility for the attack days after King Charles condemned the invasion of Ukraine. By Michael Hill Oct 02, 2023 2 mins DDoS Cyberattacks news ShadowSyndicate Cybercrime gang has used 7 ransomware families over the past year Researchers from Group-IB believe it's likely the group is an independent affiliate working for multiple ransomware-as-a-service operations By Lucian Constantin Oct 02, 2023 4 mins Hacker Groups Ransomware Cybercrime feature 10 things you should know about navigating the dark web A lot can be found in the shadows of the internet from sensitive stolen data to attack tools for sale, the dark web is a trove of risks for enterprises. Here are a few things to know and navigate safely. By Rosalyn Page Oct 02, 2023 13 mins Cybercrime Security Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe