FSB Officers Protected, Directed, Facilitated and Paid
Criminal Hackers
A grand jury in the Northern District of California has
indicted four defendants, including two officers of the Russian Federal
Security Service (FSB), for computer hacking, economic espionage and other
criminal offenses in connection with a conspiracy, beginning in January 2014,
to access Yahoo’s network and the contents of webmail accounts. The defendants
are Dmitry Aleksandrovich Dokuchaev, 33, a Russian national and resident; Igor
Anatolyevich Sushchin, 43, a Russian national and resident; Alexsey Alexseyevich
Belan, aka “Magg,” 29, a Russian national and resident; and Karim Baratov, aka
“Kay,” “Karim Taloverov” and “Karim Akehmet Tokbergenov,” 22, a Canadian and
Kazakh national and a resident of Canada.
The defendants used unauthorized access to Yahoo’s systems
to steal information from about at least 500 million Yahoo accounts and then
used some of that stolen information to obtain unauthorized access to the
contents of accounts at Yahoo, Google and other webmail providers, including
accounts of Russian journalists, U.S. and Russian government officials and
private-sector employees of financial, transportation and other companies. One
of the defendants also exploited his access to Yahoo’s network for his personal
financial gain, by searching Yahoo user communications for credit card and gift
card account numbers, redirecting a subset of Yahoo search engine web traffic
so he could make commissions and enabling the theft of the contacts of at least
30 million Yahoo accounts to facilitate a spam campaign.
The charges were announced by Attorney General Jeff Sessions
of the U.S. Department of Justice, Director James Comey of the FBI, Acting
Assistant Attorney General Mary McCord of the National Security Division, U.S.
Attorney Brian Stretch for the Northern District of California and Executive
Assistant Director Paul Abbate of the FBI’s Criminal, Cyber, Response and
Services Branch.
“Cyber crime poses a significant threat to our nation’s
security and prosperity, and this is one of the largest data breaches in
history,” said Attorney General Sessions. “But thanks to the tireless efforts
of U.S. prosecutors and investigators, as well as our Canadian partners, today
we have identified four individuals, including two Russian FSB officers,
responsible for unauthorized access to millions of users’ accounts. The United
States will vigorously investigate and prosecute the people behind such attacks
to the fullest extent of the law.”
“Today we continue to pierce the veil of anonymity
surrounding cyber crimes,” said Director Comey. “We are shrinking the world to
ensure that cyber criminals think twice before targeting U.S. persons and
interests.”
“ The criminal conduct at issue, carried out and otherwise
facilitated by officers from an FSB unit that serves as the FBI’s point of
contact in Moscow on cybercrime matters, is beyond the pale,” said Acting
Assistant Attorney General McCord. “Once again, the Department and the FBI have
demonstrated that hackers around the world can and will be exposed and held
accountable. State actors may be using common criminals to access the data they
want, but the indictment shows that our companies do not have to stand alone
against this threat. We commend Yahoo and Google for their sustained and
invaluable cooperation in the investigation aimed at obtaining justice for, and
protecting the privacy of their users.”
“This is a highly
complicated investigation of a very complex threat. It underscores the value of
early, proactive engagement and cooperation between the private sector and the government,”
said Executive Assistant Director Abbate. “The FBI will continue to work
relentlessly with our private sector and international partners to identify
those who conduct cyber-attacks against our citizens and our nation, expose
them and hold them accountable under the law, no matter where they attempt to
hide.”
“Silicon Valley’s
computer infrastructure provides the means by which people around the world
communicate with each other in their business and personal lives. The privacy
and security of those communications must be governed by the rule of law, not
by the whim of criminal hackers and those who employ them. People rightly
expect that their communications through Silicon Valley internet providers will
remain private, unless lawful authority provides otherwise. We will not
tolerate unauthorized and illegal intrusions into the Silicon Valley computer
infrastructure upon which both private citizens and the global economy rely,”
said U.S. Attorney Stretch. “Working closely with Yahoo and Google, Department
of Justice lawyers and the FBI were able to identify and expose the hackers
responsible for the conduct described today, without unduly intruding into the
privacy of the accounts that were stolen. We commend Yahoo and Google for
providing exemplary cooperation while zealously protecting their users’
privacy.”
Summary of Allegations
According to the allegations of the Indictment:
The FSB officer defendants, Dmitry Dokuchaev and Igor
Sushchin, protected, directed, facilitated and paid criminal hackers to collect
information through computer intrusions in the U.S. and elsewhere. In the
present case, they worked with co-defendants Alexsey Belan and Karim Baratov to
obtain access to the email accounts of thousands of individuals.
Belan had been publicly indicted in September 2012 and June
2013 and was named one of FBI’s Cyber Most Wanted criminals in November 2013.
An Interpol Red Notice seeking his immediate detention has been lodged
(including with Russia) since July 26, 2013. Belan was arrested in a European
country on a request from the U.S. in June 2013, but he was able to escape to
Russia before he could be extradited.
Instead of acting on the U.S. government’s Red Notice and
detaining Belan after his return, Dokuchaev and Sushchin subsequently used him
to gain unauthorized access to Yahoo’s network. In or around November and
December 2014, Belan stole a copy of at least a portion of Yahoo’s User
Database (UDB), a Yahoo trade secret that contained, among other data,
subscriber information including users’ names, recovery email accounts, phone
numbers and certain information required to manually create, or “mint,” account
authentication web browser “cookies” for more than 500 million Yahoo accounts.
Belan also obtained unauthorized access on behalf of the FSB
conspirators to Yahoo’s Account Management Tool (AMT), which was a proprietary
means by which Yahoo made and logged changes to user accounts. Belan, Dokuchaev
and Sushchin then used the stolen UDB copy and AMT access to locate Yahoo email
accounts of interest and to mint cookies for those accounts, enabling the
co-conspirators to access at least 6,500 such accounts without authorization.
Some victim accounts were of predictable interest to the
FSB, a foreign intelligence and law enforcement service, such as personal
accounts belonging to Russian journalists; Russian and U.S. government
officials; employees of a prominent Russian cybersecurity company; and numerous
employees of other providers whose networks the conspirators sought to exploit.
However, other personal accounts belonged to employees of commercial entities,
such as a Russian investment banking firm, a French transportation company,
U.S. financial services and private equity firms, a Swiss bitcoin wallet and
banking firm and a U.S. airline.
During the conspiracy, the FSB officers facilitated Belan’s
other criminal activities, by providing him with sensitive FSB law enforcement
and intelligence information that would have helped him avoid detection by U.S.
and other law enforcement agencies outside Russia, including information
regarding FSB investigations of computer hacking and FSB techniques for
identifying criminal hackers. Additionally, while working with his FSB
conspirators to compromise Yahoo’s network and its users, Belan used his access
to steal financial information such as gift card and credit card numbers from
webmail accounts; to gain access to more than 30 million accounts whose
contacts were then stolen to facilitate a spam campaign; and to earn
commissions from fraudulently redirecting a subset of Yahoo’s search engine
traffic.
When Dokuchaev and Sushchin learned that a target of
interest had accounts at webmail providers other than Yahoo, including through
information obtained as part of the Yahoo intrusion, they tasked their
co-conspirator, Baratov, a resident of Canada, with obtaining unauthorized
access to more than 80 accounts in exchange for commissions. On March 7, the
Department of Justice submitted a provisional arrest warrant to Canadian law
enforcement authorities, requesting Baratov’s arrest. On March 14, Baratov was
arrested in Canada and the matter is now pending with the Canadian authorities.
An indictment is merely an accusation, and a defendant is
presumed innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law.
The FBI, led by the San Francisco Field Office, conducted
the investigation that resulted in the charges announced today. The case is being
prosecuted by the U.S. Department of Justice National Security Division’s
Counterintelligence and Export Control Section and the U.S. Attorney’s Office
for the Northern District of California, with support from the Justice
Department’s Office of International Affairs.
Defendants: At all times relevant to the charges, the
Indictment alleges as follows:
Dmitry
Aleksandrovich Dokuchaev, 33, was an officer in the FSB Center for Information
Security, aka “Center 18.” Dokuchaev was a Russian national and resident.
Igor
Anatolyevich Sushchin, 43, was an FSB officer, a superior to Dokuchaev within
the FSB, and a Russian national and resident. Sushchin was embedded as a
purported employee and Head of Information Security at a Russian investment
bank.
Alexsey
Alexseyevich Belan, aka “Magg,” 29, was born in Latvia and is a Russian
national and resident. U.S. Federal grand juries have indicted Belan twice
before, in 2012 and 2013, for computer fraud and abuse, access device fraud and
aggravated identity theft involving three U.S.-based e-commerce companies and
the FBI placed Belan on its “Cyber Most Wanted” list. Belan is currently the subject of a pending
“Red Notice” requesting that Interpol member nations (including Russia) arrest
him pending extradition. Belan was also one of two criminal hackers named by
President Barack Obama on Dec. 29, 2016, pursuant to Executive Order 13694, as
a Specially Designated National subject to sanctions.
Karim Baratov,
aka “Kay,” “Karim Taloverov” and “Karim Akehmet Tokbergenov,” 22. He is a
Canadian and Kazakh national and a resident of Canada.
Victims: Yahoo; more than 500 million Yahoo accounts for
which account information about was stolen by the defendants; more than 30
million Yahoo accounts for which account contents were accessed without
authorization to facilitate a spam campaign; and at least 18 additional users
at other webmail providers whose accounts were accessed without authorization.
Time Period: As alleged in the Indictment, the conspiracy
began at least as early as 2014 and, even though the conspirators lost their
access to Yahoo’s networks in September 2016, they continued to utilize
information stolen from the intrusion up to and including at least December
2016.
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