U.S. Justice Dpt Pursues Collaboration to Fight Cyber Crime with EU Member 
States

June 16, 2022 05:13 PM ET 
https://www.nextgov.com/cybersecurity/2022/06/justice-pursues-collaboration-fight-cyber-crime-eu-member-states/368299/


Under an executive order on the responsible development of digital assets, the 
department recently recommended the U.S. deepen its investment in international 
organizations to counter ransomware and other illicit activity.

The Justice Department touted its organization of a workshop with the European 
Union Agency for Criminal Justice Cooperation—or Eurojust—to partner in the 
struggle to deter perpetrators of ransomware, while pushing for more resources 
to help other nations prosecute those leveraging cryptocurrencies to mask their 
illicit activity.

“Only by working together with key law enforcement and prosecutorial partners 
in the EU can we effectively combat the threat that ransomware poses to our 
society,” Assistant Attorney General Kenneth Polite said in a press release on 
the two-day event Thursday.

“I am confident that the U.S.-EU ransomware workshop will spur greater 
coordination and collaboration to address the ransomware threat.”

More than 100 prosecutors and representatives from law enforcement, the private 
sector and nongovernmental organizations from 27 countries participated in the 
workshop co-led by Eurojust, according to the release.

Starting on Wednesday, officials from U.S. law enforcement agencies—Justice’s 
Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section, FBI, Secret Service, and 
Homeland Security Investigations, along with those from Eurojust and 
Europol—shared lessons learned about adversaries’ tactics and their latest 
techniques for tracing and catching them.

The Justice Department has had some high-profile success tracking ransomware 
perpetrators, using the blockchain technology that undergirds cryptocurrencies, 
which have been the preferred form of ransom payments criminals demand to help 
preserve their anonymity.

In a June 6 report from the attorney general—in collaboration with the 
departments of State, Treasury and others—under executive order, officials 
stressed the importance of increasing international collaboration, not just 
through training, but by building the capacity of other governments and 
enforcing anti-money laundering laws for virtual currencies.

“U.S. law enforcement abilities would be significantly improved by expanding 
its overseas operational capacity (as opposed to training) to combat malicious 
criminal threats, particularly related to cybercrime and the illicit misuse of 
digital assets,” the report reads.

“Efforts to enhance the United States’ ability to detect, investigate, 
prosecute and otherwise disrupt the illicit use of digital assets would be more 
effective if funds for international capacity building were allocated to 
international law enforcement partners, including those that the Department of 
Justice, as the lead domestic law enforcement agency, has identified based on 
specific operational needs.”

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