Business World

US may accuse N. Korea in Bangladesh cyber heist

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NEW YORK — US prosecutor­s are building potential cases that would accuse North Korea of directing the theft of $81 million from Bangladesh Bank’s account at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York last year, and that would charge alleged Chinese middlemen, the Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday.

The US Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion believes that North Korea is responsibl­e for the heist, an official briefed on the probe told Reuters. Richard Ledgett, deputy director of the US National Security Agency, publicly suggested on Tuesday that North Korea may be linked to the incident, while private firms have long pointed the finger at the reclusive state.

The Journal, citing people familiar with the matter, reported that prosecutor­s believe Chinese middlemen helped North Korea orchestrat­e the theft from Bangladesh’s central bank, which was among the biggest bank robberies in modern times.

The current cases being pursued may not include charges against North Korean officials, but would likely implicate the country, the newspaper reported, with the United States accusing a foreign government of orchestrat­ing the heist.

A US Department of Justice spokesman declined to comment.

FBI off ices in Los Angeles and New York have been leading an internatio­nal investigat­ion into the February 2016 incident, in which hackers breached Bangladesh Bank’s systems and used the SWIFT messaging network to request nearly $1 billion from its account at the New York Fed.

The branch of the US central bank rejected most of the requests but filled some of them, resulting in $81 million disappeari­ng into casinos and other entities in the Philippine­s. A top police investigat­or in Dhaka told Reuters in December that some Bangladesh Bank officials deliberate­ly exposed its computer systems, enabling the hackers to get in.

The incident exposed bungling and miscommuni­cation between central banks, and left the Fed, Bangladesh, SWIFT, and the Philippine lender that initially received the funds trading blame for months.

SWIFT — or the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommun­ication that serves as the backbone of global finance — has since revealed that its messaging system has been targeted in a “meaningful” number of other attacks last year using a similar approach as in the Bangladesh incident.

Last week, SWIFT said it planned to cut off the remaining North Korean banks still connected to its system as concerns about the country’s nuclear program and missile tests grow.

The Journal reported that federal investigat­ors are focusing on Chinese individual­s or businesses who allegedly helped North Korea orchestrat­e the heist, and that the US Treasury is considerin­g sanctions against these alleged middlemen.

The New York Fed and SWIFT declined to comment. —

 ??  ?? NORTH KOREAN leader Kim Jong Un provides field guidance at a constructi­on site of Ryomyong Street in this undated picture provided by KCNA in Pyongyang on March 16. North Korea, already facing global criticisms over its missile program, is believed to...
NORTH KOREAN leader Kim Jong Un provides field guidance at a constructi­on site of Ryomyong Street in this undated picture provided by KCNA in Pyongyang on March 16. North Korea, already facing global criticisms over its missile program, is believed to...

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