LOS ANGELES
– FBI agents this morning arrested a Santa Monica man on federal charges
stemming from a series of distributed denial-of-service – or DDoS – attacks on
a website for a candidate who was campaigning for a California congressional
seat.
Arthur Jan
Dam, 32, was taken into custody this morning pursuant to a criminal complaint
filed Wednesday that charges him with one count of intentionally damaging and
attempting to damage a protected computer.
Dam
allegedly staged four cyberattacks in April and May of 2018 that took down the
candidate’s website for a total of 21 hours. “The victim reported suffering
losses, including website downtime, a reduction in campaign donations, and time
spent by campaign staff and others conducting critical incident response,”
according to the affidavit in support of the criminal complaint. The victim
further reported spending $27,000 to $30,000 to respond to the attacks, and the
candidate believes the attacks contributed to the loss in the primary election
in June 2018.
“Law
enforcement at all levels has pledged to ensure the integrity of every
election,” said United States Attorney Nick Hanna. “We will not tolerate
interference with computer systems associated with candidates or voting. Cases
like this demonstrate our commitment to preserving our democratic system.”
“Today’s
arrest shows the FBI’s commitment to hold accountable anyone who interferes
with an American’s right to vote or who deprives a candidate the right to
compete fairly in an election,” said Paul Delacourt, the Assistant Director in
Charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles Field Office. “As part of our mission to defend
the democratic process, the FBI is equipped with the expertise to respond to
allegations of election interference; whether by fraud, intimidation or – as in
this case – cyber intrusions.”
The
investigation outlined in the affidavit found that the cyberattacks all
originated from one Amazon Web Services (AWS) account, which Dam controlled,
and the four attacks corresponded to logins into that AWS account from either
Dam’s residence or his workplace. Furthermore, Dam had conducted “extensive
research” on both the victim and cyberattacks, the complaint alleges.
DDoS attacks
typically are accomplished by flooding the targeted computer with superfluous
requests in an attempt to overload systems and prevent some or all legitimate
requests from being fulfilled. After the third cyberattack, the victim
increased cybersecurity measures and retained a website security company, but
that was not enough to prevent a final disruption to the campaign’s website
just one week before the primary election.
Dam was married to a woman who was
employed by another candidate – and the eventual winner – in the congressional
race, according to the complaint. The FBI has not uncovered any evidence that
the winning candidate or Dam’s wife orchestrated or were involved in the series
of cyberattacks.
Dam was
arrested this morning after surrendering to FBI agents at the United States
Courthouse in downtown Los Angeles. Dam is expected to make his initial court
appearance this afternoon.
A criminal
complaint contains allegations that a defendant has committed a crime. Every
defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty beyond a
reasonable doubt.
If he were
to be convicted of the charge of intentionally damaging and attempting to
damage a protected computer, Dam would face a statutory maximum sentence of 10
years in federal prison.
The FBI
investigated this case.
This matter
is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Cameron L. Schroeder
and Joseph B. Woodring of the Cyber and Intellectual Property Crimes Section.
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