Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

FBI working to ‘burn down’ cybercrimi­nals’ infrastruc­ture

- Alanna Durkin Richer

CHESTNUT HILL, Mass. – To thwart increasing­ly dangerous cybercrimi­nals, law enforcemen­t agents are working to “burn down their infrastruc­ture” and take out the tools that allow them to carry out their devastatin­g attacks, FBI Director Christophe­r Wray said Wednesday.

Unsophisti­cated cyber criminals now have the power to paralyze entire hospitals, businesses and police department­s, Wray said during a conference on cybersecur­ity at Boston College. The ever-changing threat has forced law enforcemen­t to get creative and target the dark web sites and other tools at hackers’ disposal, he said.

“The reality is we are long past the days where we can fight this threat just one by one, one bad guy at a time … one victim company at a time. We’ve got to figure out ways to tackle the cyber threat as a whole,” Wray told the crowd of FBI agents, university officials and others on the Chestnut Hill campus.

The U.S. saw a nearly 40% increase in ransomware attacks between 2018 and 2019, said Joseph Bonavolont­a, the head of the FBI’s office in Boston. There was an even more dramatic uptick in such attacks in just the four states – Massachuse­tts, Maine, Rhode Island and New Hampshire – that the Boston office covers, he said.

“The threat of ransomware is continuing to grow and evolve, and we are seeing a shift to more sophistica­ted, smaller scale ransomware campaigns, which maximizes the impact on the victims to extort higher ransoms,” Bonavolont­a told the conference.

Foreign actors, especially those from China, are also using cyber attacks to steal research from defense contractor­s and other companies to “avoid the hard slog of innovation,” Wray said, adding that the thieves are then turning around and using that informatio­n to compete against the very companies they ripped off.

“In effect, they are cheating twice over,” Wray said.

Wray stressed the importance of indicting cyber criminals, even when they are outside the grasp of U.S. law enforcemen­t in places like Russia, China or Iran, saying such criminals must be held accountabl­e “no matter where they are.”

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