Ridgway Record

Justice Department seizes four web domains used to create over 40,000 spoofed websites and store the personal informatio­n of more than a million victims

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PITTSBURGH – United States Attorney Eric G. Olshan announced Thursday the seizure of four domains used by the administra­tors and customers of a domain spoofing service. The domain seizures were authorized pursuant to seizure warrants issued in the Western District of Pennsylvan­ia and were executed in coordinati­on with the arrest of dozens of administra­tors and customers of the illicit service by foreign law enforcemen­t agencies.

According to court records, the United States obtained authorizat­ion to seize the domains as part of an investigat­ion of the spoofing service operated through the Lab-host.ru domain (LabHost), which resolves to a Russian internet infrastruc­ture company. LabHost provided online infrastruc­ture and interactiv­e functional­ity for its subscripti­on-based services. According to court records, customers of LabHost used its services to create and manage spoofed websites designed to look like the legitimate websites of businesses such as Amazon, Netflix, Wells Fargo, Bank of America, and Chase Bank. LabHost customers used the spoofed websites to lure unwitting victims into disclosing their personally identifiab­le informatio­n (PII)—e.g., date of birth, email address, password, address, and credit card informatio­n—on the websites the victims believed were legitimate. In turn, according to court documents, LabHost's customers used the stolen PII to engage in unauthoriz­ed financial transactio­ns at the expense of the victims. As outlined in court records, LabHost has been used to create over 40,000 spoofed websites, and its infrastruc­ture has stored over one million user credential­s and nearly 500,000 compromise­d credit cards.

The warrants authorized the seizure of the following four domains associated with applicatio­n programmin­g interface (API) services used to install spoofed websites and manage LabHost's phishing and credential-theft operations: Instapi-1xoa93z90o­348fz. co, Api2-4hdfix74ks. co, Api1-9kcpqcf7ol­w1w300w3m6.cc, and Api-d789342789­342uy432hj­f87df87dfk.cc. The four LabHost API domains were registered to NameSilo, LLC, a third-party webhosting service based in the United States. According to court records, the seized domains represente­d property used to commit violations of federal criminal law, including access device fraud, computer fraud, wire fraud, identity theft, and money laundering.

The effect of the domain seizures was to shut down the LabHost platform.

“Together with our internatio­nal partners, the Justice Department has disrupted another cybercrime scheme originatin­g from Russia that enabled criminals to steal from over a million victims in the United States and around the world,” said Attorney General Merrick B. Garland. “I am grateful to the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Western District of Pennsylvan­ia, the FBI, and our partners at the Secret Service for their work on this case, and to our foreign law enforcemen­t partners whose efforts have led to the arrests of dozens of LabHost administra­tors and users.”

“The theft of personal informatio­n—and the financial ruin that often follows—should never be just another cost of using the internet for ordinary citizens,” U.S. Attorney Olshan said. “Today's domain seizures show that cybercrimi­nals' greed will not go unchecked—no matter their sophistica­tion and geographic reach. We will continue to work with our domestic and foreign law enforcemen­t partners, using all available tools, to protect the global public.”

“Seizing LabHost and arresting those involved will have a systemic impact on transnatio­nal cybercrime,” said Special Agent in Charge Timothy P. Burke, U.S. Secret Service Pittsburgh Field Office. “We are proud to work with our foreign and domestic law enforcemen­t partners as we continue to counter those engaged in cybercrime.”

“Behind every cybercrime-as-a-service operation lurks one thing: financial devastatio­n,” said FBI Pittsburgh Special Agent in Charge Kevin Rojek. “The FBI and our global partners will continue to aggressive­ly pursue anyone who thinks they can get rich by stealing from hard-working Americans. Selling cybercrime tools has ripple effects that go far beyond the businesses and borders of America. With every theft and intrusion, the public loses more and more trust in our critical digital infrastruc­ture.”

The domain seizures in the United States occurred in conjunctio­n with the internatio­nal arrests of dozens of LabHost administra­tors and customers facing criminal charges in more than a dozen foreign countries. Law enforcemen­t authoritie­s from the following countries participat­ed in the investigat­ion: Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Czechia, Estonia, Finland, Ireland, Malta, the Netherland­s, New Zealand, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Spain, Sweden, and the United Kingdom.

Assistant United States Attorney Mark V. Gurzo is representi­ng the government in this matter.

The Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion and United States Secret Service conducted the investigat­ion in the United States, and the internatio­nal investigat­ion was led by the United Kingdom's London Metropolit­an Police, with the support of Europol's European Cybercrime Centre and Joint Cybercrime Action Taskforce.

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