Six arrested in $ 45 m global cybercrime scheme

Wednesday, 20 November 2013 11:01 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

Reuters: Six people were arrested and charged on Monday for participating in a worldwide ATM heist that stole $ 45 million from two Middle East banks. The five men and one woman, all residents of the New York City suburb of Yonkers, were accused of being members of a global cybercrime organisation that stole Mastercard Inc. debit-card information, according to an announcement from Loretta Lynch, the US attorney for the Eastern District of New York. Robert Nardoza, a spokesman for Lynch’s office, declined to comment on where the cybercrime organisation is based, saying the investigation was ongoing.   ‘Cashers’ in the scheme The six arrested Monday were ‘cashers’ in the scheme, withdrawing approximately $ 2.8 million from more than 140 ATMs in New York City, according to the US attorney’s office. The hackers stole debit card data from the National Bank of Ras Al-Khaimah in the United Arab Emirates and Bank Muscat in Oman in two attacks in December 2012 and February 2013, according to prosecutors. They broke into payment-processing companies used by the two banks and raised the balances and withdrawal limits on the cards, prosecutors said. Crews in more than 20 countries, such as the cell arrested Monday, then withdrew $ 5 million between 21 December and 22 December and $ 40 million between 19 February and 20 February. Five of the defendants arrested Monday – Anthony Diaz, 24; Saul Franjul, 23; Saul Genao, 24; Jaindhi Polanco, 29; and Jose Angeley Valerio, 25 – pleaded not guilty in federal court in Brooklyn to conspiracy to commit access device fraud. Their lawyers were not immediately available for comment. A sixth defendant, Franklyn Ferriera, is expected to be arraigned on Tuesday. His age and the identity of his lawyer were not immediately available.   7.5 years in prison and fine of up to $ 250,000 Each faces up to 7.5 years in prison and a fine of up to $ 250,000, according to the announcement. Prosecutors said that days after the February attack, Franjul packed approximately $ 800,000 in cash into luggage that was sent by bus to one of the heist’s organisers, Alberto Yusi Lajud-Pena. Lajud-Pena, also known as ‘Prime’ and ‘Albertico’, was murdered 27 April in the Dominican Republic. “After exploiting cyber-weaknesses in the financial system to steal millions from ATMs, these defendants were packing bags to the brim with stolen cash, destined for the cybercriminal organisers of these attacks,” Lynch said in a statement on Monday. The arrests came six months after prosecutors in Brooklyn announced charges against eight others in the scheme, including Lajud-Pena.

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