EIGHT men have been arrested in the UK over a series of SIM-swapping attacks on the mobile phones of victims in the US, including well-known musicians and sports stars.
The fraud sees criminals hijack the target’s phone by deactivating their SIM card and switching the number over to a SIM controlled by a member of the criminal network. The fraudster then uses the “change password” function on apps to receive reset codes via text and email to take over the victim’s contacts, banking apps, emails and social media accounts.
It leaves the victim locked out of their accounts and helpless to protect their personal data.
The criminals were able to steal money, bitcoin and personal information, as well as make social media posts and send messages masquerading as the victims. The gang targeted thousands of victims over the course of 2020, stealing more than £71.8 million in cryptocurrencies, according to Europol.
The fraud often relies on criminals persuading mobile phone providers to do the swap using information gleaned though “phishing” scams – such as posing as a software engineer to get the victim to disclose log-in details.
Sometimes criminal networks rely on a corrupt insider at the phone company to identify targets and swap their phone details, the National Crime Agency (NCA) said.
NCA crime officers arrested eight suspects, aged between 18 and 26, in England and Scotland following a joint investigation with Europol and several US agencies, including the secret service and the FBI. The suspects are all British. Officers from Police Scotland, the Metropolitan Police, East Midlands and North East Special Operations Units and the West Midlands Regional Organised Crime Unit were also involved in the raids.
Paul Creffield, head of operations in the NCA’s National Cyber Crime Unit, said: “This network targeted a large number of victims in the US and regularly attacked those they believed would be lucrative targets, such as famous sports stars and musicians.
“In this case, those arrested face prosecution for offences under the Computer Misuse Act, fraud and money laundering, as well as extradition to the US.”
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