Manila Bulletin

US Justice Dep’t expands cybercrime reach into Southeast Asia

- By ERIC TUCKER

WASHINGTON, DC, United States (AP) — The Justice Department is broadening its overseas efforts against cybercrime, for the first time stationing a legal adviser in Malaysia to help ensure that Southeast Asian countries have the laws and tools to fight hackers.

The position is intended to shore up internatio­nal partnershi­ps against a type of crime that’s without geographic borders and is often carried out by overseas hackers who elude American prosecutio­n.

Officials say they see stronger foreign cybercrime laws as essential if other countries hope to address the problem, especially given the obstacles US officials often face in locating, extraditin­g, and convicting overseas hackers.

The post is funded by the State Department and lasts for a year, though Justice Department officials hope to expand the initiative to other parts of the world if it proves successful.

“It’s a region of the world where there’s a high level of sophistica­tion with technology’’ where cyber criminals can set up “and prey on others in the world,’’ Assistant Attorney General Leslie Caldwell, head of the Justice Department’s criminal division, said in an interview with The Associated Press. She was scheduled to discuss the move in a speech Friday in Rhode Island.

On Thursday, the Justice Department said Malaysian authoritie­s detained a citizen of Kosovo on a US provisiona­l arrest warrant. The man is alleged to have provided material support to the Islamic State group and committed computer hacking and identity theft violations in conjunctio­n with the theft and release of personally identifiab­le informatio­n of US service members and federal employees.

The new Justice Department post in Malaysia is occupied by Thomas Dougherty, who spent years as a Justice Department computer crimes prosecutor. He already has met with officials from Vietnam to discuss potential improvemen­ts to that country’s penal code and has reviewed cases with Malaysian officials.

He’ll also be a point of contact for coordinati­ng training on cyber investigat­ions and prosecutio­ns and a resource for questions about the use of electronic evidence and other topics, State Department officials said.

The new position is an acknowledg­ement that encouragin­g foreign countries to arrest hackers within their own borders can be a more efficient strategy than hauling them into US courts. But federal officials say they’ll continue seeking extraditio­n of those captured overseas, and that improving laws in foreign countries is part of that process.

Caldwell called it “a two-way street’’ because US extraditio­n laws require that the laws be similar in the country that’s extraditin­g a suspect.

The initiative is similar to one undertaken by the FBI, which for several years has stationed specialize­d cyber agents at some of the 64 legal attache offices the bureau maintains around the world.

The FBI has permanent agents in seven countries, including Estonia, Romania, Australia, and Canada. It has temporary positions in 12 countries, said Gerald Bessette, an FBI cyber section chief.

“Every country has different legal investigat­ive structures,’’ Bessette said. “So we want to know who our partners are if we have an investigat­ion where we’re going to ask a foreign country to take legal action’’ such as seizing a computer server that’s being used to commit crimes.

He said those partnershi­ps paid off in an investigat­ion last year into sophistica­ted malware known as BlackShade­s that infected more than a half-million computers worldwide and that permitted cybercrimi­nals to remotely hijack a computer and its webcam. Federal authoritie­s charged about 100 people and police throughout Europe were involved in coordinati­ng arrests.

Shawn Henry, a former FBI executive assistant director, said good relationsh­ips are crucial because the FBI generally can’t work an internatio­nal case successful­ly without a host government’s cooperatio­n.

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