The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Man sentenced for hacking WorldPay

Ukrainian gets 46 months in prison for role in global scheme.

- By Russell Grantham rgrantham@ajc.com

Levitskyy acted as one of the “cashers” who withdrew more than $9 million from 2,100 ATMs around the globe in less than 12 hours.

A Ukrainian involved in a scheme that netted millions after hacking into an Atlanta payment processor was sentenced to 46 months in federal prison.

Evgeny Tarasovich Levitskyy, 31, acted as one of the “cashers” who withdrew more than $9 million from 2,100 ATMs around the globe in less than 12 hours, according to the FBI. He is also known as Vinchenco, Vinch, and M.U.R.D.E.R.E.R., according to the FBI.

In late 2008, a team of hackers stole the account informatio­n from RBS WorldPay, the Royal Bank of Scotland’s processing center in Atlanta. The unit handled payroll debit cards that allowed workers to collect pay at ATM machines, according to investigat­ors.

After boosting limits in the accounts to more than $1,000,000, the hackers worked with a team of cashers stationed around the world to quickly withdraw cash using 44 counterfei­t debit cards.

“Cyber crime and computer intrusions are no longer executed by lone individual­s. Instead, they rely upon a complex online and real world ecosystem of criminal goods and services for hire, such as the cashing service operated by Mr. Levitskyy,” said David J. LeValley, with the FBI office in Atlanta.

Altogether, the internatio­nal hacking crew stole informatio­n on 45.5 million payroll and gift cards from RBS WorldPay, according to U.S. Attorney’s Office in Atlanta.

The leader of the hacking team, Sergie Tšurikov, was extradited from Estonia in 2014 and sentenced to 11 years in prison and to pay $8.4 million in restitutio­n for his role in the conspiracy. Levitskyy, who allegedly stole nearly $500,000 in the scheme, was extradited from the Czech Republic last year. His sentence includes restitutio­n of $499,519.

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