Cape Breton Post

‘Hacker-for-hire’ poses flight risk, U.S. says

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A Canadian man accused of breaking into hundreds of millions of Yahoo email accounts poses an “extremely high flight risk” due to alleged ties to Russian intelligen­ce agents, U.S. authoritie­s say.

U.S. law enforcemen­t officials call Karim Baratov a “hacker-for-hire” paid by members of the Russian Federal Security Service.

In an applicatio­n for arrest filed with an Ontario court, they say Baratov has the money to leave Canada and the ability to destroy evidence related to his alleged activities while on the run.

Baratov was arrested under the extraditio­n act last Tuesday. Authoritie­s say he and three others were indicted for Karim Baratov is shown in a photo from his Instagram account. Baratov, a Canadian man accused in a massive hack of Yahoo emails, posed an “extremely high flight risk” in part due to his alleged ties to Russian intelligen­ce agents, law enforcemen­t officials allege in documents filed with an Ontario court.

computer hacking, economic espionage and other crimes.

Prosecutor­s said that the defendants used a technique known as “spear-phishing” to dupe Yahoo users into thinking they were receiving legitimate emails to break into at least 500 million accounts in search of personal informatio­n and financial data such as gift card and credit card numbers.

A bail hearing is scheduled for Baratov on April 5.

Baratov’s lawyer, Amedeo Dicarlo, has said the allegation­s against his client are unfounded. Dicarlo said he will seek to have Baratov released and plans to fight an extraditio­n order.

He declined to discuss Baratov’s personal or profession­al life, describing him only as a successful entreprene­ur.

In documents filed with the Canadian court prior to his detention, U.S. authoritie­s warned that if Baratov found out about the warrant for his arrest before it could be carried out, he might attempt to flee. They pointed to the case of one of Baratov’s alleged co-conspirato­rs, Alexsey Belan, who was previously arrested for another matter in Greece in 2013 and was to be extradited to the United States.

Belan was released on bail while waiting for his extraditio­n hearing and fled to Russia, where he “benefited from the protection afforded by Russian government officials,” according to the documents. Belan had previously been indicted in 2012 and 2013 and was named one of FBI’s most wanted cybercrimi­nals in November 2013.

Baratov appeared to live a lavish lifestyle, which he documented on public social media accounts such as Instagram, posting photos of luxury cars and money.

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CP PHOTO

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