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Using Ransomware to Extort Employers by Impersonating a Gang

 


In a court in Fleetwood, Hertfordshire, a 28-year-old United Kingdom man has been found guilty of serving his employer with a forged document and unauthorized access to his computer with criminal intent. 

SEROCU has released a press release explaining the conviction of Ashley Liles, a 29-year-old IT Security Analyst at a company in Oxford that was the victim of a ransomware attack in February 2018. According to the press release, Liles worked as an IT Security Analyst at the time. 

The cybercriminals contacted the company's executive team to demand a ransom payment, the same plan used in many ransomware attacks.

As part of the company's internal investigation efforts and the incident response initiative, Liles, as well as other company members and members of the police, joined the investigation and incident response effort. 

As a result, during this period, it is said that Liles tried to enrich himself from the attack by tricking his employer into paying him a ransom instead of the actual external attacker to enrich himself. 

The SEROCU announcement reads, "Instead of pursuing a criminal case against the company, Liles also began a further and secondary attack against the company unbeknownst to the police, his colleagues, or his employer." 

In addition to accessing more than 300 times the private emails of a board member, he also altered the original blackmail email sent by the original attacker and changed the payment information provided by the original attacker. 

A plan had been hatched to take advantage of the situation by diverting the payment from the payment account and sending it to Liles' cryptocurrency wallet. 

In addition to creating an almost identical email address, Lite created another email address that looked almost identical to the original attacker, and sent emails to his employer asking for payment, said SEROCU. 

Although the company owner refused to pay the attackers, a later internal investigation that had been underway at the time revealed that Liles had access to private emails, as evidenced by the IP address of his home, suggesting that he was responsible for the attack. 

By the time SEROCU's cyber-crime team stormed into Liles' home to take his computer, Liles was well aware of the investigation and had wiped all data from his devices. However, restoring incriminating data from Liles' computer was still possible, even though he had realized the investigation was closing in on him. 

During the hearing at Reading Crown Court, Liles pleaded guilty five years after he first denied any involvement in the case and pleaded guilty a second time. There is going to be a court date for this rogue employee on July 11th, 2023, he will be sentenced at that time.

Accusing someone of hacking into a computer without their permission is punishable by up to two years in prison in the UK, while blackmail is punishable by up to 14 years in prison.