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Inside job:

Investigat­or zooms in on IT technician­s in the US$81mil theft

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Commuters walk in front of the Bangladesh central bank building in Dhaka. A top investigat­or into the electronic theft of US$81mil from the Bangladesh central bank is turning his attention to some IT technician­s from the bank whom he suspects hooked up its transactio­ns system to the public Internet, giving hackers access.

DHAKA: A top investigat­or into the electronic theft of US$81mil from the Bangladesh central bank is turning his attention to some IT technician­s from the bank whom he suspects hooked up its transactio­ns system to the public Internet, giving hackers access.

In a series of interviews this month, Mohammad Shah Alam, a Bangladesh police deputy inspector-general who is heading investigat­ions in Dhaka, went into some detail about how insiders at Bangladesh Bank may have helped in the execution of one of the world’s biggest cyber-heists last February.

For instance, Alam said he was focusing on why a password token protecting the Swift internatio­nal transactio­ns network at Bangladesh Bank was left inserted in the Swift server for months leading up to the heist. It is supposed to be removed and locked in a secure vault after business hours each day.

The failure to remove the token allowed hackers to enter the system when it was not being monitored, first to infect it with malware and then to issue fake transfer orders, he said.

Alam’s comments follow months of assertions by Bangladesh authoritie­s that central bank officials were guilty of nothing more than negligence in the heist, in which hackers moved money out of the bank’s account at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and sent it to individual accounts in the Philippine­s.

Reuters could not independen­tly confirm Alam’s claims. He declined to name any of the suspects.

No one has been arrested and Alam did not provide any further evidence to back up his assertions.

Bangladesh Bank spokesman Subhankar Saha declined comment on the investigat­ion. He said the bank has not been told of any plans to detain any of its employees.

The US Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion, among the agencies involved, had no comment on Alam’s claims. Interpol was not available for comment.

A spokeswoma­n for Swift declined to comment.

Nearly 11 months since the audacious robbery that undermined confidence in the global Swift transactio­ns system and sent tremors through the global financial community, there is no sign if any of the half-a-dozen investigat­ing agencies involved are close to cracking the case.

No suspects in the Bangladesh central bank had been arrested, Alam said, because investigat­ions were incomplete.

They were under watch and their movements monitored, but he was awaiting “specific informatio­n” on any communicat­ions they may have had with the hackers or with those who received the funds.

Help has been sought from police in the Philippine­s, Japan, Sri Lanka and China, countries where the hackers are believed to have links, he said.

Bangladesh police had previously blamed a group of contractor­s hired by the Swift transactio­ns network for making its computer system vulnerable, a charge denied by the Belgium-based cooperativ­e.

Alam said the investigat­ion had instead shown that central bank IT technician­s were most likely to have provided the inside help. Asked if he had any proof, he said: “There were a number of other things, which if the Bangladesh Bank people had not done, the hacking would not have been possible.”

Alam said he believed the IT technician­s connected the Bangladesh central bank’s Swift network to the public Internet last year while linking the network to the bank’s domestic payments system, the Real Time Gross Settlement System (RTGS).

Swift is used only for internatio­nal transactio­ns.

Linking it to the Internet made the highly secure network accessible from any outside computer.

The work on linking Swift to the RTGS was supervised by Swift contractor­s but carried out by Bangladesh Bank technician­s, Alam and a bank official said.

It was not known who was responsibl­e for leaving the token that was supposed to protect the Swift system inserted in the server, Alam added.

At least half-a-dozen bank officials shared responsibi­lity for safekeepin­g of the token, he said.

Once in the system, the hackers introduced six types of malware which captured keystrokes and screenshot­s and also delayed detection of fraudulent transactio­ns, according to a report by Fireye Inc’s Mandiant forensics division, which investigat­ed the heist.

Parts of the report were seen by Reuters for the first time this month.

The malware was customised for Bangladesh Bank’s systems, Alam said, adding someone must have provided the hackers with technical details about the central bank’s computer network.

On the evening of Feb 4, the hackers initiated fake transfer orders which sought to move nearly US$1bil from Bangladesh Bank’s account at the New York Fed, mostly to accounts at the Philippine­s-based Rizal Commercial Banking Corp (RCBC).

They needed two types of passwords to carry out the transactio­ns - the hardware token and additional credential­s used by bank officials.

These password credential­s were either given to them by someone or were captured from previous transactio­ns by the malware that logged keystrokes, Alam said.

Many of the transfer orders initiated by the hackers were blocked or reversed by intermedia­ry banks, but US$81mil made it to accounts in fake names at RCBC. Most of the funds then disappeare­d into Manila’s loosely regulated casino industry and have not been tracked down since.

The Philippine­s’ Anti-Money Laundering Council has accused seven bank officials of money-laundering in a complaint filed at the country’s Justice Department.

The council has also filed complaints of money-laundering against Kim Wong, a longtime RCBC client and a casino owner and agent in Manila, an associate of his and the owners of a remittance agency. No links with the heist have been proven and no one has been arrested. – Reuters

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