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Subject: [ISN] Young cyber-terrorists hold top US firms to ransom in Transylvania
From: InfoSec News <isn () c4i ! org>
Date: 2003-06-30 7:44:54
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Forwarded from: William Knowles <wk@c4i.org>
http://www.sundayherald.com/34961
Gabriel Ronay
29 June 2003
Several top American companies have been blackmailed to the tune of
$50,000 a head by Romanian hackers practising 'cyber- terrorism' from
the backwoods of Transylvania. Astonishingly, the cyber wizards who
penetrated the databases of security-conscious corporate America
turned out to be a group of Romanian high school drop-outs, work-shy
provincials and students manquZ.
Romania is not exactly in the vanguard of the high-tech revolution and
the medieval Transylvanian town of Sibiu, the hub of the daring
hacking operation, has hitherto been better known as the birthplace of
Vlad Dracula the Impaler than the new Silicon Valley of the Balkans.
The modus operandi of the Sibiu 'cyber terrorists,' as they have been
nicknamed by the FBI, was simple enough: they would hack into the
server of a big US company, access their protected database, download
clients' personal files and then demand $50,000 for not publishing the
confidential documents on the internet.
The young hackers' work paid so well that last April the targeted US
companies sought the help of the FBI to get on the trail of the
blackmailers. The ripped-off companies have not been named for fear of
alarming their clients.
In an operation involving the Special Investigations Unit of the
Romanian Supreme Court, the directorate-general for combating
organised crime and drugs trafficking and the Bucharest-based regional
centre for the trans-border fight against organised crime, officers of
the FBI tracked the cyber blackmail gang to Sibiu in the Carpathian
mountains.
In order to identify the blackmailers, two further transfers of ransom
money from America to Romania were 'overseen' by the FBI and Romanian
investigators. Upon the lifting of a tranche of $3600 in Sibiu, the
authorities pounced.
Last week, general Dan Fatuloiu, the deputy director of the
directorate-general for combating organised crime and drugs
trafficking revealed that, after two months of surveillance, two
members of the gang were caught red-handed as they withdrew $3600 with
a number of credit cards from a specially set up account where the
blackmailed US firms had been instructed to deposit the payoff.
He named them as Stefan Olaru, aged 21, a high school pupil, and
Sebastian Nicolae Zeicu, an unemployed man of 25. An investigating
magistrate helpfully explained that Olaru, 'still a pupil owing to
certain disciplinary exclusions from school', was the leader of the
'cyber-terrorists' and the mastermind of the entire heist.
He named the other members of the gang as Florin Lomnasan, a high
school pupil aged 19, Loredana Nastase, an 18-year-old unemployed
worker, Emilian Militaru, a student aged 25, and Vasile Somfalean, a
cyber cafe manager aged 25. They were all charged with complicity in
blackmail and aiding and abetting cyber crimes.
Olaru was specifically charged with unauthorized accessing of the
servers of US firms, illegal downloading of confidential files and
blackmailing the companies. He used the cyber cafe managed by
Somfalean to carry out the alleged internet crimes. Fatuloiu added
that Olaru, who controlled the entire operation, faced a number of
further serious charges.
Loredana Nastase's job was to open an account for the extorted money.
Sebastian Nicolae Zeicu's task was to withdraw the deposited blackmail
money from ATMs in Sibiu. Florin Lomnasan and Sebastian Nicolae Zeicu
were separately charged with the receivership of the American ransom
money.
Olaru and Zeicu, caught red-handed with some of the blackmail money,
are being kept for 30 days in a local jail for further investigation.
To the horror of the Americans, the other members of the cyber terror
gang have been released on bail.
Somewhat surprisingly, Olaru and his merry 'cyber gangsters' are seen
locally as some sort of Transylvanian Robin Hoods, who, despite their
obvious Balkans handicaps, almost managed to beat the authorities of
the world's most technologically advanced country.
For Romanians at large the Sibiu hackers are the heroes of our time
and their heist no more than 'a nice little earner'. The fact that
they had broken the law and resorted to a little injudicious
blackmailing is being overlooked as the tens of thousands of dollars
they took from corporate America fits the popular attitude summed up
in the Bucharest saying: 'Let the rich pay'.
*==============================================================*
"Communications without intelligence is noise; Intelligence
without communications is irrelevant." Gen Alfred. M. Gray, USMC
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