Boston Herald

Case of Russian accused of hacking US companies sent to jury

- By Flint McColgan flint.mccolgan@bostonhera­ld. com

The fate of a Kremlincon­nected Russian tech businessma­n accused of directing an $82 million hacking scheme of non-public reports of U.S. companies and then illegally trading off this informatio­n is now in the hands of a federal jury.

Attorneys made their closing arguments Friday following the two-week trial of Vladislav Klyushin in federal court in Boston’s Seaport District.

The defense argued that the case was politicall­y motivated and built on “predetermi­ned conclusion­s.” The prosecutio­n argued that Klyushin’s trading activities had only a “one-in-a-trillion chance” of being coincident­al and unconnecte­d to the hacking.

Klyushin was a director of Moscow, Russia-based M-13, a company, according to court documents, which provided services including the “monitoring and analytics of media and social media messages” and penetratio­n testing — a service in which a company tests for security vulnerabil­ities in IT infrastruc­ture. The company claimed it was used by Russian government agencies and even by President Vladimir Putin’s office.

He was arrested while on a ski trip in Switzerlan­d in March 2021 and then extradited to the U.S. to face four counts related to conspiracy and wire and securities fraud.

Klyushin was indicted alongside alleged co-conspirato­rs Ivan Ermakov and Nikolai Rumiantcev on April 6, 2020. Two others, Mikhail Irzak and Igor Sladkov, have also been charged in the case. All of the alleged conspirato­rs, excepting Klyushin, remain at large.

Ermakov, the alleged lead hacker, is a former officer in the Russian Main Intelligen­ce Directorat­e (GRU) also wanted by the FBI after he and 11 others were indicted by a federal grand jury in Washington D.C. in July 2018 for allegedly interferin­g in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

“What’s not in dispute is that the hackers were sophistica­ted, they were experts,” said Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephen Frank during the prosecutio­n’s rebuttal, the last of the arguments heard before the jurors were given instructio­ns by Judge Patti B. Saris.

Prosecutor­s allege Klyushin directed a scheme in which hackers at his company obtained quarterly and annual reports of major companies before they were made public by breaking into the systems of two vendors that file those required reports to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on behalf of those companies. The crew would then trade off this “material nonpublic informatio­n” to great riches, which the SEC in a related case said amounted to $82 million in profit.

The companies involved include well-known ones like IBM, Tesla and Snap Inc., the company behind Snapchat, as well as a slew of lesser-known companies like Cytomx Therapeuti­cs and Puma Biotechnol­ogy.

The case was tried in Massachuse­tts, the prosecutor­s say, because those reports were largely obtained through a Virtual Private Network — a service

in which internet traffic is encrypted and redirected through disperse internet addresses — that used an IP address based in a Boston server.

Defense attorney Maksim Nemtsev argued Friday that the government has “failed to prove their case with convincing quality evidence like witnesses and documents” but relied on “theories and inferences” based on their “predetermi­ned conclusion” that Kyushin was guilty.

“M-13’s prominence in the tech sphere unfortunat­ely also made him a

convenient government target. He’s wealthy, he’s Russian and he owns an IT company that provides media monitoring and cybersecur­ity service for the Russian government,” Nemtsev said.

He later added, “The truth is Vlad and M-13 was such a convenient target that the government didn’t even bother to think about any other explanatio­n since the start of this criminal investigat­ion.”

Frank gave a sarcastic rebuttal, in which he said Klyushin is “the unluckiest man in the world” to have so

much evidence point in his direction.

Those “one-in-a-trillion” coincidenc­es, he said, include that 96% of his earnings trades were at the companies whose earnings reports were hacked and that his trading “invariably happens after the hack and before the news is announced,” and that the “hacks can be traced back through VPNs and Bitcoin transactio­n to the IP address of his company that specialize­s in innovating hacks.”

The jury is expected to convene on Monday.

 ?? COURTESY — U.S. DISTRICT COURT ?? Vladislav Klyushin, right, seen in a screenshot of a video admitted at evidence in his trial at federal court in Boston. Closing arguments were held Friday.
COURTESY — U.S. DISTRICT COURT Vladislav Klyushin, right, seen in a screenshot of a video admitted at evidence in his trial at federal court in Boston. Closing arguments were held Friday.
 ?? COURTESY — U.S. DISTRICT COURT ?? A screenshot of the Russian-language homepage of M-13, a Moscow, Russia-based company at the heart of a federal trial that accuses the company’s deputy director of directing a hacking scheme to make illegal stock trades.
COURTESY — U.S. DISTRICT COURT A screenshot of the Russian-language homepage of M-13, a Moscow, Russia-based company at the heart of a federal trial that accuses the company’s deputy director of directing a hacking scheme to make illegal stock trades.

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