Eleven held in biggest US identity fraud

Eleven people face charges over the hacking of nine major US retailers and the theft and sale of more than 41 million credit and debit card numbers.

Eleven held in biggest US identity fraud

Eleven people face charges over the hacking of nine major US retailers and the theft and sale of more than 41 million credit and debit card numbers.

It is believed to be the largest hacking and identity theft case prosecuted by the US Department of Justice. The charges include conspiracy, computer intrusion, fraud and identity theft.

The indictment returned yesterday by a federal grand jury in Boston says the suspects hacked into the wireless computer networks of retailers including TJX Cos, BJ’s Wholesale Club, OfficeMax, Boston Market, Barnes & Noble, Sports Authority, Forever 21 and DSW.

“While technology has made our lives much easier it has also created new vulnerabilities,” US Attorney Michael Sullivan said. “This case clearly shows how strokes on a keyboard with a criminal purpose can have costly results.”

The indictment says the hackers installed programs to capture card numbers, passwords and account information, then concealed the data in computer servers that they controlled in the US and Eastern Europe.

“They used sophisticated computer hacking techniques that would allow them to breach security systems and instal programs that gathered enormous quantities of personal financial data, which they then allegedly either sold to others or used themselves,” said attorney general Michael Mukasey in a press conference.

“And in total, they caused widespread loses by banks, retailers, and consumers.”

Mr Mukasey said the total dollar amount of the alleged theft was “impossible to quantify at this point”. He said officials still had not identified all the victims who had a credit or debit card number stolen.

“I suspect that a lot of people are unaware that their identifying information has been compromised,” he said.

Mr Sullivan said the alleged thieves were not computer geniuses, just opportunists who used a technique called “wardriving”, which involved cruising through different areas with a laptop computer and looking for accessible wireless internet signals.

Once they located a vulnerable network, they installed so-called “sniffer programs” that captured credit and debit card numbers as they moved through a retailer’s processing networks.

The information was stored on two servers in Ukraine and Latvia – one with more than 25 million credit and debit card numbers and another with more than 16 million numbers, Mr Sullivan said.

The fraud was a black eye for retailers like TJX. The company, which initially disclosed the data breach in January 2007, said a few months later that at least 45.7 million cards were exposed to possible fraud in a breach of its computer systems that began in July 2005. Court filings by some banks that sued TJX put the number of cards affected at more than 100 million, based on estimates by officials with Visa and MasterCard, who were deposed in the suit.

In May, TJX said it won support from Mastercard-issuing banks for a settlement that will pay them as much as £12m (€15m) to cover costs from the data breach. A similar agreement reached last November with Visa-card issuing banks also was overwhelmingly approved. That agreement set aside as much as £20.5m (€26m) to help banks cover costs including replacing customers’ payment cards and covering fraudulent charges.

Under the indictments unsealed yesterday, three of the defendants are US citizens, one is from Estonia, three are from Ukraine, two are from China and one is from Belarus. One individual is only known by an alias online, and his place of origin is unknown.

In the Boston indictment, Albert “Segvec” Gonzalez of Miami, who is accused of leading the scheme, was charged with computer fraud, wire fraud, access device fraud, aggravated identity theft and conspiracy. Gonzalez, who is in custody in New York, faces a maximum penalty of life in prison if convicted of all the charges.

Indictments were unsealed yesterday in San Diego against Maksym “Maksik” Yastremskiy of Kharkov, Ukraine, and Aleksandr “Jonny Hell” Suvorov of Sillamae, Estonia. The indictments charge them with crimes related to the sale of the stolen credit card data.

Furthermore, indictments against Hung-Ming Chiu and Zhi Zhi Wang, both of China, and a person known only by the online nickname “Delpiero” were also unsealed in San Diego.

Officials did not say whether any other suspects were in custody, or give a court date for Gonzalez.

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