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| OPERATION PHISH PHRY Major Cyber Fraud Takedown |
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| 10/07/09 | ||||||||||
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Cyber thieves “phish” for personal information such as usernames, passwords, and financial account details by tricking users into thinking their sensitive information is being given to trusted websites when, in fact, the sites are traps.
The defendants in Operation Phish Phry targeted U.S. banks and victimized hundreds and possibly thousands of account holders by stealing their financial information and using it to transfer about $1.5 million to bogus accounts they controlled. More than 50 individuals in California, Nevada, and North Carolina, and nearly 50 Egyptian citizens have been charged with crimes including computer fraud, conspiracy to commit bank fraud, money laundering, and aggravated identify theft.
While Phish Phry defendants were being rounded up, Mueller told his audience, “The FBI is both a law enforcement and national security agency, which means we can and must address every angle of a cyber case. This is critical, because what may start as a criminal investigation may lead to a national security threat. … At the start of a cyber investigation, we do not know whether we are dealing with a spy, a company insider, or an organized criminal group.” In the case of Operation Phish Phry, money appears to be the driving motive. But as Mueller pointed out, “Something that looks like an ordinary phishing scam may be an attempt by a terrorist group to raise funding for an operation.” Mueller’s remarks came during National Cybersecurity Awareness Month, an annual event sponsored by the Department of Homeland Security to help educate the public on the shared responsibility of protecting cyberspace. “Cyber crime might not seem real until it hits you,” Mueller said. “But every personal, academic, corporate, and government network plays a role in national security.”
Within the government, we have established the National Cyber Investigative Joint Task Force, which brings together law enforcement, intelligence, and defense agencies to focus on high-priority cyber threats. Within the private sector we run InfraGard, where we exchange information with 32,000 partners from private industry. But even with all our partnerships, Mueller added, “we are still outnumbered by cyber criminals.” Which is why it’s so important for people to do their fair share. That means protecting your home computer with firewalls, anti-virus software, and strong passwords. “We all have a responsibility to protect the infrastructure that protects the world,” Mueller said. Resources: |




