In early 2025, residents of a northwest Ohio county noticed something unusual: the county’s sheriff’s Facebook page had been compromised. Unauthorized posts appeared on the account, prompting officials to quickly regain control and warn the public. While the social media hack itself was disruptive, it turned out to be just a visible symptom of a much larger and far more expensive cybersecurity crisis.
Behind the scenes across the country, local counties are already dealing with the fallout of major ransomware attacks. In late 2024 a county in northwest Ohio suffer a ransomware attack that ultimately carried a price tag of $1.5 million.
Social media account takeovers are often dismissed as minor nuisances, but in this case, the Facebook hack highlighted a critical reality: once attackers gain a foothold, no digital system is off limits. From public-facing platforms like Facebook to internal networks that support emergency services, ransomware actors frequently exploit multiple attack vectors to expand access and maximize leverage.
The compromised Facebook page served as a public reminder that cybersecurity incidents are rarely isolated. Instead, they are often part of a broader campaign that targets infrastructure, data, and operations simultaneously.
More serious local government breaches occur that crippled key systems, affecting operations such as 911 dispatch, jail management, and internal county services. To restore access and resume normal operations, county officials can end up paying over $1.5 million ransom payment.
While that figure alone is staggering, it represents only one portion of the total cost of a ransomware attack.
Modern ransomware incidents carry layers of financial impact that extend well past the initial payment:
Industry studies estimate the average total cost of a ransomware attack exceeds $5 million, once recovery, downtime, and indirect losses are factored in.
Ransomware attacks are becoming more expensive due to several trends:
These factors combine to make ransomware one of the most financially damaging cyber threats facing organizations today.
These incident illustrates how even a single cybersecurity failure can cascade across multiple systems from internal servers to public communication platforms like social media. The Facebook hack was the warning sign. The ransomware payment revealed the real cost.
For municipalities, schools, healthcare providers, and businesses of all sizes, the lesson is clear: investing in cybersecurity is far less expensive than recovering from a ransomware attack. Proactive defenses, employee awareness training, and secure backups are no longer optional — they are essential.