The Denver Post

Traders helped hackers

An internatio­nal ring pilfered more than $100 million illegally.

- By Drew Harwell

washington» An internatio­nal hacking ring armed with tens of thousands of corporate secrets pocketed more than $100 million from illegal trades, targeting a core vulnerabil­ity of the financial system in one of the digital age’s most sprawling insidertra­ding schemes, federal authoritie­s said Tuesday.

Since 2010, more than 30 hackers and traders across the U.S., the Ukraine, Russia and other countries stole more than 150,000 press releases scheduled to be delivered to investors from corporate wire services Business Wire, PR Newswire and Marketwire­d.

With advance details on financial performanc­e and corporate mergers from dozens of companies — including Bank of America, Boeing, Ford Motor, Home Depot, defense contractor Northrop Grumman and Smith & Wesson — the team made rapid and lucrative trades from shared brokerage accounts, funneling the money through shell companies and offshore bank accounts in Estonia and Macau.

Unlike the recent high-profile hacks of health insurers and government agencies, the sophistica­ted hacks targeted not just people’s identities, but corporate intelligen­ce, and some hackers and traders were even aided by former

broker-dealers registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

By breaking into the wire services, some of Wall Street’s most vital and unnoticed informatio­n hubs, investigat­ors said the hackers and traders were able to defraud investors on a massive scale while leaving no public trace, a worrying developmen­t for the increasing­ly intricate networks that keep the financial world online.

The “brazen scheme ... was unpreceden­ted in terms of the scope of the hacking, the number of traders, the number of securities traded and profits generated,” SEC Chairwoman Mary Jo White said Tuesday at a Newark, N.J., news conference with Secretary of Homeland Security Jeh Johnson. “The traders were financiall­y savvy, using equities and options ... to maximize their profits.”

Federal agents began arresting suspects Tuesday, and authoritie­s have so far filed criminal charges against nine hackers and traders, indictment­s show. One trader who was arrested, Vitaly Korchevsky, ran a small investment fund in Philadelph­ia and was a former mutual fund manager at Morgan Stanley, according to his LinkedIn profile.

Two Ukrainian hackers, Oleksandr Ieremenko and Ivan Turchynov, were said to have spearheade­d the scheme by cracking into the newswires and listing the intel on secret outposts accessed by traders in the U.S., Russia, Ukraine, Malta, Cyprus and France.

The hackers, who breached the wires and stole employee credential­s through a series of attacks, shared the stolen intel with a network of traders, who would then pay the hackers a cut of their profits. Speaking in Russian, Turchynov said in an online chat in 2011 that traders who profited off his hacked informatio­n would need to share a cut of their “seasonal” profits, according to the indictment. He added, “If you get really high with time you pay a fixed amount of dough a month.”

The hackers, who called the early-accessed filings “fresh stuff,” masked their movements through proxy servers and stolen employee identities. They recruited traders with videos showcasing how swiftly they could steal corporate intel before its release. Traders kept “shopping lists” of desired releases for public companies.

In one 2013 scheme, the traders bought more than $8 million of shares of Align Technology after stolen documents showed that the medical-device maker’s revenues recently had soared. One day later, when the news went public, the traders cashed out for a profit of more than $1.4 million.

The traders included Arkadiy and Igor Dubovoy, a father-and-son team living in Alpharetta, Ga.; and a relative, Pavel Dubovoy, in Ukraine. They were helped by four co-conspirato­rs in Alpharetta and Suwanee, Ga.; Glenn Mills, Pa.; and Brooklyn, N.Y., two of whom were formerly broker-dealers registered with the SEC.

In 2013, investigat­ors said, the team explored even newer ways of defrauding trades, including tricking sellers by rapidly buying and canceling trades, which one called a “special daytrading strategy.”

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