Credit
card sting snares dozens globally
At
least 24 people in 13 countries are arrested in US-led operation
against cyber criminals trading information.
27
June, 2012
At
least 24 people have been arrested in the United States and abroad in
a US-led sting operation targeting cyber criminals buying and selling
stolen credit card information, officials said Tuesday.
US
Attorney Preet Bharara said the probe uncovered "a breathtaking
spectrum of cyber schemes and scams" spread across the United
States, Canada and 11 other countries in Europe and Asia.
The
two-year investigation dubbed “Operation Card Shop” began in June
2010 when the FBI set up an online carding forum called Carder
Profit.
The
FBI monitored and recorded communications on the forum as well as
private messages sent through the site between registered users. The
FBI also recorded IP addresses of users who accessed the forum.
The
operation targeted "sophisticated, highly organized cyber
criminals" involved in selling stolen identities and credit
cards along with fake documents and sophisticated hacking tools, said
Janice Fedarcyk , the FBI's assistant New York chief.
Eleven
people were arrested in the United States and 13 others arrested
overseas, in seven different countries, the prosecutors' statement
added.
Six
people were arrested in Britain, two in Bosnia, and one each in
Bulgaria, Norway and Germany on charges in those countries.
Two
others were arrested Tuesday in Italy and Japan based on provisional
warrants obtained by the US in connection with charges unsealed in
New York.
Co-ordinated
global arrests
Bharara
said those accused in the scheme "sold credit cards by the
thousands and took the private information of untold numbers of
people," while offering "every stripe of malware and virus
to fellow fraudsters."
"As
the cyber threat grows more international, the response must be
increasingly global and forceful," said Bharara, who is the US
federal attorney for the Southern District of New York.
"The
co-ordinated law enforcement actions taken by an unprecedented number
of countries around the world today demonstrate that hackers and
fraudsters cannot count on being able to prowl the Internet in
anonymity and with impunity, even across national boundaries,"
he said.
Because
the FBI was able to warn those affected by compromised accounts, the
operation "prevented estimated potential economic losses of more
than $205 million," a statement by prosecutors said.
The
FBI was also able to notify the credit card providers of more than
411,000 compromised credit and debit cards, and 47 companies,
government entities, and educational institutions that their networks
had been breached.
Law
enforcement agencies in Britain, Australia, Bosnia, Bulgaria,
Denmark, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Macedonia and Norway
took part in the investigation, the US officials said.
Of
the 11 held in the US, two are minors.
One
of those arrested, Mir Islam, who uses the name "JoshTheGod,"
claimed to be a member of UGNazi, a group that has claimed credit for
numerous recent online hack attacks, and a founder of Carders.Org, a
carding forum on the internet. Officials said he had information for
more than 50,000 credit cards.
The
FBI said it seized the web server for UGNazi.com, and seized the
domain name of Carders.org, taking both sites offline.
.
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