Threats
FBI reaching out
to theaters screening 'The Interview'
By Pamela Brown, CNN
updated
11:07 AM EST, Wed December 24, 2014

Sony to release
'The Interview' ... again
Washington (CNN) -- The FBI is
reaching out to the slightly more than 200 theaters which plan to screen
"The Interview" on Thursday, warning of potential threats.
The
FBI on Tuesday night sent out a roster of those theaters to cyber task forces
in FBI field offices. FBI agents will call or visit those theaters to inform
them of possible threats they could face by screening the movie, though
officials stress that there is no actionable intelligence pointing to an active
plot against moviegoers.
Officials
are most concerned that those theaters could be targets of hacking and FBI
cyber task forces will team up with the Joint Terrorism Task Force.
Sony
has been in close communication with the FBI on its plans for releasing the
movie and FBI officials said they have been "fully engaged" with
Sony, which gave the FBI a heads up of its decision to greenlight the
screenings.
The
screenings come after Sony Pictures initially backed off its plans to premiere
the controversial movie on Christmas Day after a group of hackers broke into
Sony's servers, published personal emails and information and threatened a
terror attack on theaters that would screen the movie. The U.S. has blamed
North Korea for the cyberattack.
The
comedic movie centers on a fictitious plot to assassinate North Korean leader
Kim Jong Un.
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