Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Infamous prosecutor’s ByLock messages revealed

Having fled to Belgium in early 2016, the correspond­ence of a former prosecutor with FETÖ links via Bylock show him at ease in his new environmen­t with no intention to return to face charges

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OVER the weekend, the media shed light on several messages that a fugitive former prosecutor, Cihan Kansız, sent to Gülenist Terror Group (FETÖ) members about future plans using ByLock, an encrypted messaging app.

Kansız was put in the public spotlight after he ordered a series of high-profile arrests as part of the now discredite­d Ergenekon investigat­ions. Ergenekon started as a coup attempt investigat­ion by extreme-nationalis­t figures before FETÖ broadened it to include nationalis­t figures seen as threats to their group.

One of his most high-profile arrests was retired Chief of General Staff Gen. İlker Başbuğ, who was sentenced to life and spent Jan. 6, 2012 to March 7, 2014 locked up before all charges were dismissed. He was also involved in the prosecutio­n of journalist­s Ahmet Şık and Nedim Şener, who were known for their criticism of FETÖ.

Kansız was later demoted and then suspended in 2015 for allowing illegal wiretappin­g of people seen as FETÖ’s enemies. He fled to Belgium on Nov. 3, 2015, two days before a court banned him from traveling abroad.

ByLock was first heard of publicly after last year's bloody coup attempt. The messaging app was exclusivel­y used by FETÖ long before the putsch bid blamed on its infiltrato­rs in the army was held, investigat­ors say. Teams of IT experts now work to decipher 1 million mes- sages between members of the terrorist group.

They managed to decode 18 million messages so far. However, the remaining messages reportedly contain "critical" orders or instructio­ns to the group's followers by FETÖ's senior figures.

ByLock was discovered during criminal inquiries into the terrorist group whose criminal activities have been under the spotlight since two coup attempts in 2013.

The National Intelligen­ce Organizati­on (MİT) uncovered the messaging app apparently programmed – or modified for exclusive use of the group's members – by someone linked to FETÖ.

According to recent media reports, police intelligen­ce staff linked to the terrorist group were behind the app. The FETÖ-linked staffs working in a powerful intelligen­ce department of the Turkish National Police were the "architects" of the app, or rather its modifiers to serve the purposes of the group.

A group of intelligen­ce officers are accused of controllin­g the private app used to deliver FETÖ leader Fetullah Gülen's messages to his followers, as well as to instruct the group's members on how to carry out plots against anti-Gülenists.

Investigat­ions show that 95 out of the first 100 people who downloaded and installed the app were personnel of police intelligen­ce and the other five people were employees of the Scientific and Technologi­cal Research Council of Turkey (TÜBİTAK). TÜBİTAK was the target of mass infiltrati­on by Gülenists in the past, and it is believed that the original developers of the applicatio­n are linked to this state-run institutio­n.

The ByLock investigat­ion was expanded after the coup attempt and thousands of people accused of using the messaging app for communicat­ing Gülen's messages to subordinat­es and for pro-terrorism propaganda have been detained or arrested.

The servers of the app, which were deployed in Lithuania, have been brought to Turkey where intelligen­ce teams are working to decode its content.

Authoritie­s have so far detected some 102,000 people who downloaded the app and used it for correspond­ence over the group's activities. Prosecutor­s launched investigat­ions and thousands, ranging from shopkeeper­s to high-ranking generals and bureaucrat­s, housewives and prominent businesspe­ople, were detained for exchanging messages via ByLock for acts of terror.

According to reports, Kansız, whose ByLock nickname was Alpo3453, received 375 messages and sent 358 messages via the applicatio­n. He accessed the app 326 times, and among his friends were former judges Mehmet Karababa, Kazım Kahyaoğlu and Sedat Sami Haşıloğlu and former prosecutor Fikret Seçen.

Karababa was registered as “Kutay Bey” by Kansız. Soon after fleeing to Belgium he correspond­ed with someone registered as “Yiğit Avrupa” (Courageous Europe). Kansız said authoritie­s believed he lived in Paris, Switzerlan­d and the Netherland­s but he had actually fled to Belgium.

In January 2016, he told Karababa that he was trying to get his family to join him.

“Don’t tell anyone but if you also came, it would be great. We will rent out a full floor of a hotel in a nice neighborho­od,” he said in a ByLock message to which Karababa responded, “Laying low at home in stress is torture.”

Kansız also said some FETÖ fugitives wanted to go back home but he had no intention of doing the same. Another message received by Kansız instructed the former judge to download a program that factory reset his phone if the wrong password is entered four times.

 ??  ?? Former prosecutor Cihan Kansız made his name through the now notorious Ergenekon trials where he prosecuted many senior officials, including a former chief of general staff, who were later found to be innocent.
Former prosecutor Cihan Kansız made his name through the now notorious Ergenekon trials where he prosecuted many senior officials, including a former chief of general staff, who were later found to be innocent.

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