NEW
YORK/BOSTON — The U.S. government charged eight individuals with using data
obtained by hacking into two credit card processors in a worldwide scheme that
netted some $45 million within hours, a crime prosecutors described as one of
the biggest bank heists in history.
The
individuals formed the New York-based cell of a global cyber criminal
organization that stole Mastercard Inc debit card data from two Middle
Eastern banks, the Justice Department said. The information was used to make
more than 40,500 withdrawals at automated teller machines in 27 countries,
prosecutors said.
The
cards were issued by National Bank of Ras Al-Khaimah in the United Arab
Emirates and Bank of Muscat in Oman, prosecutors said.
Bank
representatives could not be reached for comment outside of regular business
hours.
The
case demonstrates the major threat that cyber crime still poses to banks around
the world. Security experts frequently identify electronic fraud as one of the
key challenges facing banks today.
“Hackers
only need to find one vulnerability to cause millions of dollars of damage,''
said Mark Rasch, a former federal cyber crimes prosecutor, based in Bethesda,
Maryland.
Authorities
said they arrested seven of the eight defendants, all U.S. citizens and
residents of Yonkers, New York. They are Jael Mejia Collado, Joan Luis Minier
Lara, Evan Jose PeIna, Jose Familia Reyes, Elvis Rafael Rodriguez, Emir Yasser
Yeje and Chung Yu-Holguin.
The
eighth defendant charged in the indictment, Alberto Yusi Lajud-PeIna, also
known as “Prime'' and “Albertico,'' was murdered on April 27 in the Dominican
Republic, according to prosecutors. U.S. Attorney Loretta Lynch in Brooklyn,
New York, who filed the charges, said at a press conference it was unclear
whether the murder was related to the cybercrime case.
Prosecutors
said the attacks, known as “unlimited operations,'' occurred in two separate
incidents in December 2012 and February 2013.
The
hackers gained access to companies that process debit card transactions,
eliminated the maximum withdrawal limits on the cards and then employed
“casher'' crews to take money out of ATMs around the world using the stolen
data, prosecutors said.
After
the cards were shut down, cashers laundered the proceeds, often by purchasing
luxury goods, and sent a portion of the money back to the organization's
leaders, prosecutors said.
In the
New York City area, the ring withdrew nearly $400,000 in less than three hours
at more than 140 ATM locations, prosecutors said. On another occasion,
approximately $2.4 million was collected in nearly 3,000 ATM withdrawals over a
10-hour stretch, according to prosecutors.
That makes
the case the second biggest bank robbery in New York City history, Lynch said,
after the so-called “Lufthansa heist,'' in which robbers stole millions in cash
and jewelry from John F. Kennedy International Airport.
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