Police probe hoax bitcoin bomb threats
across U.S., Canada
Send a link to a friend
[December 15, 2018]
(Reuters) - U.S. law enforcement
officials on Friday were investigating a wave of hoax emailed bomb
threats demanding bitcoin payment that caused worry but no damage in the
United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.
On Thursday in North America, hundreds of businesses, government offices
and schools received awkwardly-worded letters threatening to set off
explosives if payments of $20,000 in cryptocurrency were not received.
The threats led to scattered evacuations of schools and transit stations
before the Federal Bureau of Investigation and other agencies dismissed
them as lacking credibility.
Hoax threats were received in cities including Washington, New York,
Detroit, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Phoenix, Oklahoma City, Grand
Rapids, Iowa, Denver, Ottawa and Calgary, Alberta.
Investigators do not yet know who was responsible, two federal officials
said on Friday. There is no evidence to suggest that any of the
recipients made ransom payments, one of the officials said.
Cisco Systems Inc's <CSCO.O> Talos cyber security unit said it believes
the threats came from a group of fraudsters previously responsible for
sending "sextortion" emails that claim to have videos showing the
recipients having sex.
The fraudsters threaten to release compromising videos they claim to
have obtained with software that recorded people through webcams on
their computers.
Some of this week's bomb threats came from the same internet addresses
used in those sextortion campaigns, Talos researcher Jaeson Schultz said
in a blog post.
[to top of second column]
|
Passengers stand outside King subway station after a bomb threat was
made in Toronto, Ontario, Canada December 13, 2018. REUTERS/Chris
Helgren
"The criminals conducting these extortion email attacks have
demonstrated that they are willing to concoct any threat and story
imaginable that they believe would fool the recipient," the blog
said.
"We expect these sorts of attacks to continue as long as there are
victims who will believe these threats to be credible, and be scared
enough to send money to the attackers," it said.
A similar series of hoax bomb threats occurred in December 2015,
prompting officials in Los Angeles to close the city's public school
system, which national law enforcement officials later criticized as
an over-reaction.
Two weeks previously, a married couple inspired by Islamic State had
killed 14 people at a California county office building in a
shooting rampage.
A teenager with dual Israeli-U.S. citizenship was arrested in Israel
in March 2017 for making bomb threats to more than 100 Jewish
organizations and Jewish community centers in dozens of U.S. states
over several months.
(Reporting by Scott Malone in Boston, Angela Moon and Gabriella
Borter in New York, Mark Hosenball in Washington; Editing by Nick
Zieminski and Grant McCool)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|