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Operation Trident Breach found many mules are Eastern Europeans who came to the U.S. on student visas.
Among the allegations in the FBI's criminal complaints:
One mule was an immigrant from Moldova who within a few months of her arrival in New York this year had opened at least six bank accounts using a trio of names. Another mule, a Russian national, opened eight accounts at three different banks using five different aliases.
The criminal networks used so many money mules that full-time recruiters were needed. One recruiter placed advertisements on Russian language websites seeking students with U.S. visas.
A pair of Russian roommates living in Brooklyn worked together. One smuggled at least $150,000 in cash to hackers in Russia, arranged for fake passports to be smuggled into the U.S., and acted as a middleman picking up and delivering stolen money from other mules. The other roommate opened accounts with fake names and false passports in New York and New Jersey this summer.
This cybertheft ring zeroed in on individuals and small- and medium-sized businesses because they usually have fewer computer security safeguards than huge companies. Among its targets: municipalities in Massachusetts and New Jersey, the account held by a hospital at a California bank and the computers of at least 30 customers of E Trade Financial Corp.
Like a number of victims, Experi-Metal has sued its bank over the thefts.
A lawyer for Experi-Metal, Richard Tomlinson, said the thieves emptied the company's account and then tried to siphon another $5 million out through an empty savings account of an Experi-Metal employee. They actually transferred another $1.34 million before the bank shut down the mystery wire transfers, Tomlinson said.
According to court records, the company's bank, Dallas-based Comerica Inc., has recovered all but the company's original balance of $560,000. Tomlinson said the bank should be liable for the company's losses because the wire transfers were obviously dubious -- the company hadn't made any transfers in more than two years and never to Eastern Europe.
"Canada was maybe as exotic as we got and it was maybe three or four years before this," Tomlinson said.
Comerica says it wasn't part of the problem.
"This was caused solely by the actions of that (Experi-Metal Inc.) employee," a lawyer for the bank wrote in a court filing. "The criminal that accessed Experi-Metal's accounts was able to do so only because Experi-Metal gave him its key."
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Online:
FBI background: http://tinyurl.com/27ae5bc
E Trade security: http://tinyurl.com/34g9zya
E Trade losses: http://tinyurl.com/2v3oga7
TD Ameritrade:
http://www.tdameritrade.com/security/index.html
Comerica security: http://tinyurl.com/2u9akou
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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