New York Daily News

‘ViLE’ doxxing scammers Feds charge 2 with using stolen cop credential­s in extort plot

- BY JOHN ANNESE

A 71-year-old man fatally stabbed his live-in ex-girlfriend inside their Brooklyn home Monday hours before surrenderi­ng to police for the killing, cops and sources said.

The attacker repeatedly knifed Claudette Ferron, 58, in the apartment they shared on Linden Blvd. near E. 43rd St. in East Flatbush, according to cops, with a neighbor describing a tumultuous relationsh­ip between the couple.

“It’s sad, but he couldn’t control his emotions,” the longtime neighbor told the Daily News. “It’s the court system. She had an order of protection against him. They release him . ... After a couple of weeks, I saw him come back here.”

At some point early Monday, he stabbed Ferron multiple times in the back. He arrived hours later at the NYPD’s 67th Precinct stationhou­se and confessed to the crime.

Cops rushed to the apartment to discover the woman’s lifeless body on a bed around 3:45 p.m., with the man taken into custody. Charges against the suspect were still pending Tuesday as the senior underwent a psychiatri­c exam, police said.

The neighbor said the couple’s most recent dispute involved a $2,000 debt owed by the victim to the accused killer.

A Queens man and his teenage cohort from Rhode Island posed as a cop to access law enforcemen­t data as part of a sick doxxing and extortion scheme, federal prosecutor­s in Brooklyn said Tuesday.

The duo belonged to an online group called “ViLE” that used the body of a hanging girl as its logo and threatened to post people’s private informatio­n online if they didn’t pay up, the feds allege.

The two suspects, Nicholas Ceraolo, 25, of Queens, and Sagar Singh, 19, used a police officer’s stolen credential­s to log into a federal law enforcemen­t info portal in May, according to a criminal complaint.

The portal, which isn’t named in the complaint, is “used to share intelligen­ce from government databases with state and local law enforcemen­t agencies,” and “includes detailed, nonpublic records of narcotics and currency seizures, as well as law enforcemen­t intelligen­ce reports,” the feds said.

The doxxing group used that info for nefarious purposes, prosecutor­s said.

Singh, who goes by the screen name “Weep,” threatened to expose one victim on May 9, sending a text message with his target’s social security, phone number and private info, prosecutor­s.

“You’re gonna comply to [SIC] me if you don’t want anything negative to happen to your parents . ... I have every detail involving your parents ... allowing me to do whatever I desire to them in malicious ways,” he told the victim, according to the feds.

In another message, Singh told the victim that he had access to databases through the federal portal, warning, “I can request informatio­n on anyone in the US doesn’t matter who, nobody is safe,” the feds allege.

Singh’s goal was the get the victim to sell their Instagram credential­s, and pass the proceeds of the sale to him, according to the complaint.

Singh was the first to get the police officer’s login info, and after giving it a test run on May 7, he gave it to Ceraolo, the feds allege.

“It worked,” Ceraolo wrote to Singh, according to the feds, adding, “This is an [Federal Law Enforcemen­t Agency] agent pretty sure . . . were all gonna get raided one of these days i swear.”

Ceraolo, who goes by the names “Convict,” “Ominous” and “Anon,” then shared the login credential­s with more members of “ViLE,” and discussed how to use automated tools to “scrape” large amounts of data from the portal, the feds allege.

Ceraolo also posed as a Bangladesh­i cop, using the officer’s official account, to trick social media platforms and a facial recognitio­n company into giving up informatio­n about users, with mixed success, according to the feds.

One platform was fooled by his February 2022 claim that he was seeking info on a user involved in “child extortion” and blackmail, but a second platform, which runs a popular online game, didn’t fall for his ruse, according to the criminal complaint. Neither did the facial recognitio­n company.

The online game platform tweeted about not being tricked, and Ceraolo sought revenge by trying to get private info on the company’s administra­tors, the feds allege.

“I wanna hack these f——s for acting like their [sic] untouchabl­e,” he wrote a co-conspirato­r, musing that he could “easily get 6 figs” by selling the info on the dark web, the feds said.

Singh was arrested in Pawtucket on Tuesday morning, and is slated to appear before a federal judge in Rhode Island before his case is moved to Brooklyn. Ceraolo remains at large.

“Singh and Ceraolo aptly belonged to a group called, as their crime was, ‘Vile.’ That conduct ends today,” U.S. Attorney Breon Peace said Tuesday.

Ceraolo could face up to 20 years behind bars if he’s convicted of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, while both men face five years for committing computer intrusions.

Singh’s lawyer did not immediatel­y return a message seeking comment, and attempts to reach Ceraolo’s family were unsuccessf­ul Tuesday.

 ?? GARDINER ANDERSON FOR DAILY NEWS ?? Police investigat­e after Claudette Ferron was found fatally stabbed in her apartment on Linden Blvd. in East Flatbush on Monday.
GARDINER ANDERSON FOR DAILY NEWS Police investigat­e after Claudette Ferron was found fatally stabbed in her apartment on Linden Blvd. in East Flatbush on Monday.

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