| 16 arrests in an anti-phishing operation |
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| Thursday, 09 November 2006 | ||||
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The operation involved 6 different states in the USA (New York, Texas, Tennessee, Nebraska, Georgia and Ohio) and two European countries (Romania and Poland), but we can’t exclude that the investigation would have been conducted on other countries as well... Such enquiry started in 2004 with an investigation over a case of phishing attacks against a bank where more than 100.000 credit and debit cards from more than 1.000 customer were jeopardized and sold on specific forums. Later that year, the FBI discovered these activities and developed a program to limit the growth of such forums, but after a brief stop many other forums were created with new security measures to avoid detection. According to federal Officials, the arrests testify FBI’s commitment against cybercrime, especially concerning investigations aimed to wipe off online credit cards frauds. Specifically, the FBI says it is working with local law enforcement officials in the USA and Eastern Europe to detect groups or single people leading this sort of illicit business. It is interesting to notice that such groups commonly use “mules” or middlemen to forward cash and credit cards to buyers and sellers in exchange for a slice of the profit. This would be a reasonable explication for the vertiginous increasing of spam that in last months have targeted job hunters carrying fake job-offers.This activity was first noticed by the security company Panda Software which hypothesized that those offers were actually attempts to find 'mules' to launder stolen money. But answering the email meant to become ”mules” , that is to receive money in personal bank accounts in exchange for commission, and being then asked to send the money to accounts belonging to the fraudsters. But thanks to users who promptly informed the authorities about similar “weird” messages, a team composed by FBI officials and local police was able to trace back the attackers and to arrest the people involved in such activities: The problem in the problem for the “federals” is about prisoners’ extradition. Indeed, being the suspects Romanian citizens who have always operated in Romania and since their computer servers have always run in Romania, there’s little the FBI could do to carry them to the USA..
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Last week an international intervention by FBI corps led to the arrest of 16 people that are suspected of participating in a website where stolen personal data were traded and phishing attacks were launched, 



