last month , resulting in the loss of video evidence . The police chief decided not to pay the ransomAttack.Ransomand instead had the server wiped , according to WFAA in Texas . The television station reported that the police chief does not believe this was a targeted attack by terrorists . Cybercriminals are thought to have casted a wide net with spam and an unsuspecting police department employee invited the malware in upon clicking on a link . According to Acronis , the latest update of the Locky crypto-ransomware variant , Osiris , is behind this attack . Acronis ’ New Generation technology that proactively prevents zero-day infections , discovered this new mutation . It currently bypasses all ( to our best knowledge ) antivirus/anti-malware software , including Windows Defender . [ Learn about top security certifications : Who they 're for , what they cost , and which you need . Accoridng to a press release , once the Cockrell Hill Police Department became aware that files on the server had been corruptedAttack.Databreachby a computer virus , they immediately disconnected the server and all computers from the internet and all state database systems and were able to contain the virus . The virus had been introduced onto the network from a spam email that had come fromAttack.Phishinga cloned email address imitatingAttack.Phishinga department issued email address . An internet webpage showed that if the police department paid $ 4,000 in Bitcoin , then the police department 's online contents would be released . The FBI Cybercrimes unit recommended that the police department isolate and wipe the virus from the servers . This virus affected all Microsoft Office Suite documents , such as Word documents and Excel files . In addition , all body camera video , some in-car video , some in-house surveillance video , and some photographs that were stored on the server were corruptedAttack.Databreachand were lost , the police department stated in its release . Files that were affected did go back to 2009 , however hard copies of all documents and the vast majority of the videos and photographs are still in the possession of the Police Department on CD or DVD . It is unknown at this time how many total digital copies of documents were lost , as it is also unknown how many videos or photographs that could have assisted newer cases will not be available , although the number of affected prosecutions should remain relatively small , the press release said