Monday | 13 October, 2008
Computerworld
Losses likely to rise from latest Romanian crime ring
Losses from a Romanian cybercrime ring that was broken up on Tuesday could reach into the millions of euros.
Jeremy Kirk (IDG News Service) 18/07/2008 09:47:08

Computerworld Buyer's Guide - Vendors Matched to this Article
Additional Resources
Executive Guides
Whitepapers
Zones
Zone logoZones provide focussed content from Computerworld and leading technology partners.

Newsletter Subscription

Sign up for our Computerworld newsletters!
Computerworld's twice-daily news service keeps you in touch with the latest, most important headlines from Australia and around the world.
Keep up with the latest virtualisation technologies, products, news and features.
IDG's security alert service provides you with alert emails for new virus releases or security incursions of significant importance.
A weekly round-up of virus alerts, bug reports, patch releases and security news.
RSS Feeds

The losses caused by a cybercrime ring broken up on Tuesday by Romania could reach into the millions of euros, an official with the General Inspectorate of the Romanian National Police said on Thursday.

With help from the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation, Romania arrested 19 people on Tuesday for a wide-ranging cybercrime and money-laundering operation. Romania is still hunting for other suspects.

The operation is estimated to have net the group at least US$635,000, but the investigation continues, and the real losses of the victims "probably will be much more, millions of euros," the official said.

The scammers are alleged to have put fake listings on auction sites such as eBay and ran phishing Web sites to steal credit card information.

The arrests represent another rare victory for law enforcement, which many experts have said is having difficulty dealing with the complexity of cybercrime cases along with the sheer number of scams.

Romania, along with other Eastern European countries, has been a hot bed for Internet crime given the country's high computer skills and economic factors such as low pay and employment.

The proceeds of the scams were used in part to buy luxury cars and real estate, the official said. Those arrested will be prosecuted under fraud-related charges.

The group allegedly shuffled money through a network of global bank accounts set up under false names, funneling the proceeds back to Romania, the official said.

"They hired people for a small amount of money to take the money from their account so the police could not discover the real beneficiaries of the money," the official said.

Police executed warrants on 34 residences in several Romanian cities, seizing at least the equivalent of US$50,000 in Romanian lei, British pounds and euros, plus 18 laptops,12 PCs and 29 mobile phones, the official said.

The FBI and Romania have cooperated before. In May, 38 people in the U.S. and Romania were charged for allegedly orchestrating complicated phishing schemes intended to steal credit and debit card numbers.

In those cases, debit and credit cards were used to withdraw money from ATMs or point-of-sale terminals with the highest withdrawal limits, the U.S. Department of Justice said at the time. Some of the money was wired to the card-number supplier in Romania.

Computerworld Buyer's Guide - Vendors Matched to this Article
Market Place

Computerworld Member Login


 
CA Knowledge Centre

Security Management

Protect your critical IT assets, achieve sustainable regulatory compliance, reduce IT administration costs and enable new business opportunities with our IT security solutions.

IT Security as a business enabler?
Download Whitepaper

CA Knowledge Centre

Success Stories


Australian Unity minimises costs and maximises productivity with single sign-on for 1,400 users
Australian Unity needed to address its business and security risks including user management and application security management. The company chose an enterprise single sign-on (ESSO) solution and discovered increased employee productivity, reduced help desk costs and elevated data protection.
Download the full Success Story


BT saves more than £15 million and improves customer services with comprehensive Identity & Access Management
To enable future growth and ensure its services remain competitive, BT needed to build closer relationships with its customers and suppliers. Discover how the company is now performing over 36 million transactions a day with their improved Identity & Access Management Solution.
Download the full Success Story


Identity & Access Management


Simplify and Secure: Managing User Identities Throughout their Lifecycles
Organisations are constantly challenged to keep pace with ongoing changes to users and their roles, responsibilities and requirements. Discover how CA can help you create a unified approach for managing users identities, providing them with timely and appropriate access to applications and information.
Download Whitepaper


Simplify, Integrate and Safeguard Your Business with Secure Web Business Enablement
Modern organisations are required to aggressively expand the number and type of Web applications and services provided to customers, partners and employees. Discover how to automate, delegate and centralise your key processes and services including user administration, access policies, auditing and compliance by reading on.
Download Whitepaper


Simplify, Integrate and Secure: Providing Secure Access to Server-based Information and Resources Across Platforms
Distributed servers are a powerful asset in any company’s infrastructure. Over time, most organisations have acquired a variety of different platforms and are relying on them to house an increased amount of critical applications, processes and data. Read on to discover how you can achieve a consistently higher level of server access security across multiple platforms including virtual hosts and guest operating systems.
Download Whitepaper

Enterprise IT Buyer's Guide
Find Technology Vendors Fast
 
Find vendors by name | Find by category
Sponsored Links