Austin American-Statesman

Russian hacking suspect arrested in Prague

LinkedIn said it believed it had been a victim in the case.

- Rick Lyman and Hana De Goeij ©2016 The New York Times

A man identified as a Russian hacker suspected of pursuing targets in the United States has been arrested in the Czech Republic, police announced Tuesday.

The suspect was captured in a raid at a hotel in central Prague on Oct. 5, about 12 hours after authoritie­s heard that he was in the country, where he drove around in a luxury car with his girlfriend, according to police. The man did not resist arrest, but he had medical problems and was briefly hospitaliz­ed, police said in a statement.

David Schon, a police spokesman, said Wednesday that the arrest of the man, whose name has not been released, was not announced immediatel­y “for tactical reasons.”

The police statement said that “the man was a Russian citizen suspected of hacking attacks on targets in the United States,” and that the raid was conducted in collaborat­ion with the FBI after Interpol issued an arrest warrant for him.

The social media company LinkedIn said it believed it had been a victim in the case. The company, which acts as a virtual job network, said it had been actively involved in the FBI’s case since it was hacked in 2012.

The FBI said in a statement that the arrest was an example of the collaborat­ion needed “to successful­ly defeat cyber adversarie­s,” but declined to provide further details.

The arrest occurred two days before the Obama administra­tion formally accused the Russian government of stealing and disclosing emails from the Democratic National Committee and other institutio­ns and prominent individual­s.

But law enforcemen­t officials in Washington, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to comment, said Wednesday that the suspect did not appear to be related to the hacking of the Democrats’ emails or to organizati­ons like DCLeaks or WikiLeaks.

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