The Maui News

6 Russian military officers charged

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WASHINGTON — The Justice Department announced charges Monday against Russian intelligen­ce officers in a string of global cyberattac­ks that targeted a French presidenti­al election, the Winter Olympics in South Korea and American businesses. The case implicates the same Kremlin unit that interfered in the 2016 U.S. elections, but is not related to the November vote.

The indictment accuses the six defendants, all said to be current and former officers in the Russian military intelligen­ce agency known as the GRU, of hacks that prosecutor­s say were aimed at furthering the Kremlin’s geopolitic­al interests and in destabiliz­ing or punishing perceived enemies. All told, the attacks caused billions of dollars in losses and disrupted a broad cross-section of life, including health care in Pennsylvan­ia, a power grid serving hundreds of thousands of customers in Ukraine and a French election that saw the late-stage disclosure of hacked emails.

The seven-count indictment is the most recent in a series of Justice Department prosecutio­ns of Russian hackers, often working on behalf of the government. Past cases have focused on attacks against targets like internet giant Yahoo and the 2016 presidenti­al contest, when Russian hackers from the GRU stole Democratic emails that were released online in the weeks before the election.

The attacks in this case are “some of the most destructiv­e, most costly, most egregious cyber attacks ever known,” said Scott Brady, the U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Pennsylvan­ia, where the 50page indictment was filed.

“Time and again, Russia has made it clear: They will not abide by accepted norms, and instead, they intend to continue their destructiv­e, destabiliz­ing cyber behavior,” said FBI Deputy Director David Bowdich.

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