The Denver Post

U.S. suspects cellphone spying

- Jacquelyn Martin, The Associated Press By Frank Bajak U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, via The Associated Press

For the first time, the U.S. government has publicly acknowledg­ed the existence in Washington of what appear to be rogue devices that foreign spies and criminals could be using to track individual cellphones and intercept calls and messages.

The use of what are known as cellphone-site simulators by foreign powers has long been a concern, but American intelligen­ce and law enforcemen­t agencies — which use such eavesdropp­ing equipment themselves — have been silent on the issue until now.

In a March 26 letter to Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden, the Department of Homeland Security acknowledg­ed that last year it identified suspected unauthoriz­ed cell-site simulators in the nation’s capital. The agency said it had not determined the type of devices in use or who might have been operating them. Nor did it say how many it detected or where.

The agency’s response, obtained by The Associated Press from Wyden’s office, suggests little has been done about such equipment, known popularly as Stingrays after a brand common among U.S. police department­s. The Federal Communicat­ions Commission, which regulates the nation’s airwaves, formed a task force on the subject four years ago, but it never produced a report and no longer meets regularly.

The devices work by tricking cellphones into locking onto them instead of legitimate cell towers, revealing the exact location of a particular phone. More sophistica­ted versions can eavesdrop on calls by forcing phones to step down to older, unencrypte­d 2G wireless technology. Some attempt to plant malware.

They can cost $1,000 to $200,000. They are commonly the size of a briefcase; some are as small as a cellphone. They can be placed in a car next to a government building. The most powerful can be deployed in low-flying aircraft.

Thousands of members of the military, the NSA, the CIA, the FBI and the rest of the nationalse­curity apparatus live and work in the Washington area. The surveillan­ce-savvy among them encrypt their phone and data communicat­ions and employ electronic countermea­sures. But unsuspecti­ng citizens could fall prey.

Wyden, a Democrat, wrote DHS in November requesting informatio­n about cell-site simulators.

The reply from DHS official Christophe­r Krebs noted that DHS had observed “anomalous activity” consistent with Stingrays in the Washington area. A DHS official who spoke on condition of anonymity added that the devices were detected in a 90-day trial that began in January 2017 with equipment from a Las Vegas-based DHS contractor, ESD America.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States