Massive Online Market for Stolen Data Taken Down by Global Operation

id=”article-body” class=”row” section=”article-body” data-component=”trackCWV”>

Law enforcement in Europe and the US on Tuesday said they had taken down and seizedĀ a massive illegal online market that bought and sold access to databases of millions of credit card numbers and other sensitive information belonging to Americans and others around the world.

The alleged administrator of RaidForums and two other people were arrested in the operation dubbed Tourniquet, which was coordinated by and brought together law enforcement from the US, UK, Sweden, Portugal and Romania.

Launched in 2015, RaidForums boasted over a half a million users, making it one of the largest illegal markets of its kind in the world, Europol said. Its data came from US companies representing a variety of industries, having been harvested from breaches and other cybercrimes carried out over the past few years.

In addition to credit card numbers, the hundreds of databases included stolen bank routing and account numbers, login credentials and Social Security numbers, the said.

According to US court records unsealed Tuesday, the US recently received authorization from a judge to seize three domains that hosted the RaidForums website. Also unsealed were criminal charges against RaidForums’ purported founder and chief administrator, Diogo Santos Coelho, 21, of Portugal. Coelho was arrested in the UK on Jan. 31 at the US’ request and remains in custody pending extradition, the Justice Department said.

The six-count indictment against Coelho charges him with conspiracy, access device fraud and aggravated identity theft. It says that over the past seven years, Coelho controlled and served as the chief administrator of RaidForums, ProbablyRandom which he operated with the help of other website administrators.

In addition to creating and managing the site, the indictment says Coelho personally sold stolen data on the platform. He also directly facilitated illegal sales by operating a fee-based “official middleman” service where he helped others buy and sell data by verifying the means of payment and files being sold before letting the deal go forward, the indictment says.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *