Ukrainian police on Thursday arrested five people suspected of
orchestrating an international fraud ring that siphoned more than $70m
out of bank accounts by infecting computers with the Zeus trojan.

The action by Ukraine's SBU was part of an unprecedented partnership
among law enforcement agencies in the US, the UK, the Netherlands, and
Ukraine, the FBI said in a press release issued on Friday. “Operation
Trident Beach” first came to light on Tuesday with the arrest of 19
people in London in connection to Zeus-related offenses. On Thursday,
11 individuals were charged in Westminster Magistrates' Court, and in
New York federal prosecutors announced similar charges against 37.

Most of those suspects were accused of being “money mules” who set up
hundreds of bank accounts under fraudulent names to launder money
transferred from accounts that were compromised by the crimeware.

The five people arrested in Ukraine, by contrast, are “key subjects
responsible for this overarching scheme” the FBI said. In all, the
ring attempted to steal $220m and succeeded in getting $70m.

Trident Beach began in May 2009, when FBI agents in Omaha, Nebraska
learned of automated clearing house batch payments to 46 separate bank
accounts throughout the US. Agents eventually brought in counterparts
from the other involved countries. The payments are a hallmark of Zeus
scams, in which hackers break into victim bank accounts and then clean
them out using the bank's ACH transfer system.

The thieves targeted small- to medium-sized companies, municipalities,
churches, and individuals.

It's been a bad week for criminals who rely on Zeus. On Monday, a
researcher disclosed an Achilles' Heel in the crimeware that makes it
relatively easy to take over command and control servers.

@TheRegister



Regards
Sandeep Thakur

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