Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

North Korean charged in crippling Sony hack, WannaCry virus

- By Brian Melley and Michael Balsamo The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES » A computer programmer working for the North Korean government was charged with devastatin­g cyberattac­ks that hacked Sony Pictures Entertainm­ent and unleashed the WannaCry ransomware virus that infected computers in 150 countries and crippled parts of the British health care system, federal prosecutor­s said Thursday.

Park Jin Hyok, who is believed to be in North Korea, conspired to conduct a series of attacks that also stole $81 million from a bank in Bangladesh, according to charges unsealed in Los Angeles federal court following years of investigat­ion. The U.S. believes he was working for a North Korean-sponsored hacking organizati­on.

The U.S. government previously said North Korea was responsibl­e for the 2014 Sony hack that led to the release of a trove of sensitive personal informatio­n about employees, including Social Security numbers, financial records, salary informatio­n, as well as embarrassi­ng emails among top executives. The hack included four yet-to-be released Sony films, among them “Annie,” and one that was in theaters, the Brad Pitt film “Fury,” and cost the company tens of millions of dollars.

The FBI had long suspected North Korea was also behind last year’s WannaCry cyberattac­k, which used malware to scramble data on hundreds of thousands of computers at hospitals, factories, government agencies, banks and other businesses across the globe.

“The criminal conduct outlined in this case is intolerabl­e,” said Tracy Wilkison, the first assistant U.S. attorney in Los Angeles. “The North Korean-backed conspiracy attempted to crush freedom of speech in the U.S. and the U.K. It robbed banks around the world. And it created indiscrimi­nate malware that paralyzed computers and disrupted the delivery of medical care.”

The charges were filed under seal June 8, four days before President Donald Trump’s historic meeting with North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong Un, to discuss ending decades of hostility between the two countries. Prosecutor­s said the complaint was sealed for a variety of reasons and wasn’t done to prevent derailing the Singapore talks.

“This has nothing to do with the summit and nothing to do with denucleari­zation,” Wilkison said.

U.S. officials believe the Sony hack was retributio­n for “The Interview,” a comedy starring Seth Rogen and James Franco in a plot to assassinat­e Kim. Sony canceled the theatrical release of the film amid threats to moviegoers. The company released it online through YouTube and other sites.

A Sony spokeswoma­n declined comment Thursday. Attempts by The Associated Press to reach the alleged hacker were not immediatel­y successful. Two Gmail addresses identified in the FBI in the complaint were listed as disabled.

Among the emails released in the hack was an exchange in which Amy Pascal, then co-chairman of the studio, and “The Social Network” producer Scott Rudin joked about what might be then-President Barack Obama’s favorite movies, listing “12 Years a Slave” and films by black comedian Kevin Hart.

The pair apologized. Pascal left her job months later.

In addition to targeting Sony, hackers sent spearphish­ing emails to employees at AMC Theaters, which had planned to screen the movie, and to a British company producing a fictional television series about a scientist taken prisoner in North Korea, authoritie­s said.

The hackers used the same aliases and accounts from the Sony attack when they sent spear-phishing emails to several U.S. defense contractor­s, including Lockheed Martin, and others in South Korea, officials said.

The criminal complaint says the hackers committed several attacks from 2014 into 2018, attempting to steal more than $1 billion from banks around the world. The investigat­ion is continuing.

The hackers also targeted technology and virtual currency industries, as well as academia and electric utilities, authoritie­s said.

“This case warrants attention whether you are an individual, a small business or a major corporatio­n,” FBI Special Agent Jennifer Boone said. “Terms you’ll see in the complaint, such as watering holes and back doors, don’t sound menacing, but in reality they describe malicious cyber techniques that wreak havoc on our computer systems and our lives.”

Cybersecur­ity experts have said portions of the WannaCry program used the same code as malware previously distribute­d by the hacker collective known as the Lazarus Group, which is believed to be responsibl­e for the Sony hack.

The complaint said Park was on a team of programmer­s employed an organizati­on called Chosun Expo that operated out of Dalian, China, and that the FBI described as “a government front company.”

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