Iranians linked to Revolutionary Guards charged with hacking American banks and controls of major New York dam. | |||||
Middle East Online | |||||
NEW
YORK - The United States on Thursday unsealed computer hacking charges
against seven Iranians working for firms linked to the Iranian
government, accusing them of hacking dozens of American banks and the
controls of a major New York dam.
The defendants were
employed by computer security companies that performed work on behalf of
Tehran's powerful Revolutionary Guard Corps, the indictment said.
In
what prosecutors called "a frightening new frontier for cybercrime,"
one of the suspects was alleged to have repeatedly hacked into the
system that controls the Bowman Dam in Rye, New York.
"Although
no actual harm resulted from that infiltration, the potential havoc of
such a hack of American infrastructure could wreak is scary to think
about," Attorney for Manhattan, Preet Bharara told a joint news
conference with Attorney General Loretta Lynch.
Lynch announced the charges as a 17-page, three-count indictment from a New York grand jury was unsealed.
It
comes one month after President Barack Obama unveiled a $19 billion
cybersecurity action plan as his intelligence chief warned of the
growing risks from new technologies that open more doors to hackers.
"Today
we have unsealed an indictment against seven alleged experienced
hackers employed by computer security companies working on behalf of the
Iranian government, including the Revolutionary Guard Corps," Lynch
said.
The Revolutionary Guard Corps is one of several
entities within the Iranian government responsible for intelligence, the
indictment read.
"Online services were disrupted.
Hundreds of thousands of Americans were unable to access bank accounts
online. These attacks were relentless, systematic and widespread," Lynch
added.
"We believe they were conducted with the sole
purpose of undermining the companies and damaging America's free
markets," she added.
The hacking began in December 2011
and escalated in September 2012, then occurring on a near weekly basis
until May 2013, prosecutors said.
According to the indictment, Bank of America, J.P. Morgan Chase, Citibank and HSBC were among those affected.
A
grand jury in Manhattan found that the seven defendants conducted a
series of cyber attacks against civilian targets in the financial world,
costing the victims tens of millions of dollars, Lynch said.
The
three-count indictment charges teams from two private companies, ITSect
Team and Mersad Co, with conspiracy to commit computer hacking.
- Bowman Dam hack -
Hamid
Firoozi, one of the defendants, was also charged with unauthorized
access to a protected computer, the system that controls the Bowman Dam.
The
indictment alleges he hacked into it repeatedly between August and
September 2013, gaining access to information about the status and
operation of the facility.
It allowed him access to
information about water levels and temperature, and would also have
allowed him to remotely operate and manipulate the sluice gates had the
gates not been manually disconnected for maintenance, it added.
"But
for that fact, that access would have given the defendant the access to
control water levels, flow rates, an outcome that could have posed a
clear and present danger to the public health and safety of Americans,"
said Lynch.
Last month, US intelligence chief James
Clapper named Iran, as well as Russia, China and North Korea as "leading
threat actors" that pose risks for US security that are growing as
technology evolves and moves into new devices.
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Friday, 25 March 2016
US indicts seven Iranians for hacking
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