Hacking and Trading Scheme Involved Theft of Thousands of
‘EDGAR’ Filings, Including Draft Earnings Reports of Publicly Traded Companies
before Reports were Made Public
Two Ukrainian men have been charged for their roles in a
large-scale, international conspiracy to hack into the Securities and Exchange
Commission’s (SEC) computer systems and profit by trading on critical
information they stole.
In a 16-count indictment unsealed today in the District of
New Jersey, Artem Radchenko, 27, and Oleksandr Ieremenko, 26, both of Kiev,
Ukraine, are charged with securities fraud conspiracy, wire fraud conspiracy,
computer fraud conspiracy, wire fraud, and computer fraud. The SEC also filed a
civil complaint today charging Ieremenko along with several other individuals
and entities.
The indictment alleges that Radchenko and Ieremenko hacked
into the SEC’s Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis and Retrieval (EDGAR) system
and stole thousands of files, including annual and quarterly earnings reports
containing confidential, non-public, financial information, which publicly
traded companies are required to disclose to the SEC. The defendants and others
then profited by selling access to the confidential information in these
reports and trading on this stolen information prior to its distribution to the
investing public.
“The defendants allegedly orchestrated sophisticated
computer intrusions to steal non-public information from the SEC, compromising
the integrity of the market and depriving honest investors of a level playing
field,” said Assistant Attorney General Benczkowski. “The Department of Justice will aggressively
pursue and prosecute those who attack our financial markets and seek to profit
unfairly, no matter where such offenders reside.”
“The defendants charged in the indictment announced today
engaged in a sophisticated hacking and insider trading scheme to cheat the
securities markets and the investing public,” U.S. Attorney Craig Carpenito
said. “They targeted the Securities and Exchange Commission with a series of
sophisticated and relentless cyber-attacks, stealing thousands of confidential
EDGAR filings from the Commission’s servers and then trading on the inside
information in those filings before it was known to the market, all at the
expense of the average investor.”
“Today’s indictment sends a strong message to those
criminals who choose to use the cyber-world to profit from network intrusion,”
Mark McKevitt, Special Agent in Charge of the Secret Service Newark Field
Office, said. “The Secret Service will continue to aggressively investigate
cyber-enabled financial crimes and develop innovative ways to combat emerging
cyber threats.”
“This indictment is a
testament to the countless hours of hard work and dedication by law enforcement
in the fight against cyber criminals,” FBI Special Agent in Charge Gregory W.
Ehrie said. “Cybercrime knows no
boundaries. Dismantling these operations are possible only by working closely
with our partners.”
According to the indictments unsealed today:
From February 2016 to March 2017, Radchenko, Ieremenko, and
others conspired to gain unauthorized access to the computer networks of the
SEC’s EDGAR system, which is used by publicly traded companies to file required
disclosures, such as annual and quarterly earnings reports. These filings
contained detailed information about the financial condition and operations of
the companies, including their earnings. Such information can, and often does,
affect the stock price of the companies when it is made public, and is therefore
highly confidential prior to its disclosure to the general public.
The EDGAR system allows companies to make test filings in
advance of a public filing. These test filings often contain information that
is the same as, or similar to the information in the final filing. The
defendants stole thousands of test filings before they were released to the
public, and sought to profit from their theft by using the information in the
test filings to trade before the investing public learned the information.
To gain access to the SEC’s computer networks, the
defendants used a series of targeted cyber-attacks, including directory
traversal attacks, phishing attacks, and infecting computers with malware. Once
the defendants had access to the test filings on the EDGAR system, they stole
them by copying the test filings to servers they controlled. For example,
between May 2016 and October 2016, the defendants extracted thousands of test
filings from the EDGAR servers to a server they controlled in Lithuania.
Ieremenko was previously charged in a hacking and securities
fraud scheme in an indictment in the District of New Jersey. That indictment
charged Ieremenko with being part of a large-scale, international conspiracy to
hack the computer systems of three newswire organizations and steal press
releases containing confidential non-public financial information relating to
hundreds of companies traded on the NASDAQ and NYSE from three newswires. The
members of the conspiracy profited from the theft by trading on the news ahead
of its distribution to the investing public. The indictment unsealed today
alleges Ieremenko employed some of the same methods to hack the SEC.
Radchenko recruited to the scheme traders who were provided
with the stolen test filings so they could profit by trading on the information
before the investing public. Armed with the stolen information, the traders
profited by executing various trades in brokerage accounts they controlled. In
one instance, a test filing for “Public Company 1” was uploaded to the EDGAR
servers at 3:32 p.m. (EDT) on May 19, 2016. Six minutes later, the defendants
stole the test filing and uploaded a copy to the Lithuania server. Between 3:42
p.m. and 3:59 p.m., a conspirator purchased approximately $2.4 million worth of
shares of Public Company 1. At 4:02 p.m., Public Company 1 released its second
quarter earnings report and announced that it expected to deliver record
earnings in 2016. Over the next day, the conspirator sold all the acquired
shares in Public Company 1 for a profit of more than $270,000.
The wire fraud conspiracy and substantive wire fraud counts
with which the defendants are charged carry a maximum potential penalty of 20
years in prison and a $250,000 fine, or twice the gain or loss from the
offense. The securities fraud conspiracy, computer fraud conspiracy, and
substantive computer fraud counts with which the defendants are charged carry a
maximum potential penalty of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine, or twice
the gain or loss from the offense.
This case was investigated by the U.S. States Secret Service
and special agents of the FBI, with assistance from the SEC’s Market Abuse and
Cyber Units and the Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs.
The prosecution is
being handled by Trial Attorney Aarash Haghighat of the Criminal Division’s
Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section (CCIPS), and by Assistant U.S.
Attorney Daniel Shapiro; Chief of the Cybercrimes Unit Justin S. Herring;
Attorney-in-Charge, of the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Trenton Nicholas Grippo;
and Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Lynn O’Connor.
The charges and allegations contained in the indictment are
merely accusations, and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until
proven guilty.
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