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Five Suspects Charged for $2.5 million Worth NFTs Theft, Targeting Bored Ape NFT Owners

 

On Wednesday, October 12, five crypto scammers in France faced allegations of collaborating in a phishing scam and were consequently charged. Allegedly, the suspects have audaciously acquired and resold $2.5 million worth of blue chip non-fungible tokens (NFTs). The phishing scam prominently targeted Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC) and Mutant Ape Yacht Club (MAYC) owners. 
 
As per the prosecution, the alleged suspects leveraged a phishing scam in order to steal the assets, enticing victims through a fake website, while promising to animate their NFTs, reports Agence France Presse (AFP) in a post by Barrons. 
 
The charged suspects aged between 18 and 24, are residents of Paris, Caen, and Tours. Two of the five scammers are charged with manufacturing the fraudulent phishing site that enabled the theft. The rest three were accused of taking charge of advertising and money laundering aspects of the phishing, says deputy chief of France’s cyber-crime authority, Christopher Durand. 
 
The prosecution charges included “fraud committed as a part of criminal gang, concealing fraud and criminal association.” The subjects have been placed in pre-trial detention by the French authorities, along with their parents. The parents of one of the accused have also been arrested, but later they were released without charge. 
 
The deputy chief says that the probe was initially started as a result of an investigation by well-known Twitter user “ZachXBT" ZachXBT, describing himself as an “on-chain sleuth" in a blog post mentioned how the Twitter user “Dilly Dilly" had clicked on a link shared by “a verified member of the BAYC Discord" and consequently had his BAYC NFT stolen after approving a transaction on website that “he was lead to believe would produce an animated version” of his NFT.  
 
ZachXBT claims that after selling the stolen tokens on the NFT marketplace Opensea, the accused tried to hide the tracks by using the now-sanctioned Tornado Cash protocol. 
 
A report by blockchain analytics firm Elliptic suggests that over $100 million worth of NFTs being stolen between July 2021 and July 2022. Along with these recent incidents, NFT fraud seems to be rapidly booming in general and thus has sparked security concerns.  
 
This news sees the light of day when the firm behind the Bored Ape collection, Yuga Labs is under investigation for its business practices. Although the organization has not yet been charged with any misconduct, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is now investigating the start-up, to check if the anonymous sources reported by Bloomberg are true.

Two More Arrested as suspects of Lulsec and Anonymous by British Police

British Police arrested two suspects of Anonymous and Lulsec group as part of an International Investigation.

The suspects, ages 24 and 20, were arrested in South Yorkshire and Wiltshire, police said.

They are suspected of conspiring to commit offenses under the Computer Misuse Act of 1990.

"The arrests relate to our enquiries into a series of serious computer intrusions and online denial-of-service attacks recently suffered by a number of multinational companies, public institutions and government and law enforcement agencies in Great Britain and the United States," said Det. Mark Raymond of the Metropolitan Police Service's Central e-Crime Unit.

"We are working to detect and bring before the courts those responsible for these offences, to disrupt such groups, and to deter others thinking of participating in this type of criminal activity."He added.

The name "Kayla" was used in the suspected intrusions, police said in a statement.

Hacking group Lulz Security has claimed responsibility for attacks on targets such as Sony, the CIA and Britain's Serious Organised Crime Agency.

Today, Anonymous hacked the Texas Police Chiefs Association for #Antisec.


Anonymous and LulzSec case: UK police fly to US to gather hacking evidence



Summary: Guardian reported that UK police officers have flown to the US to gather evidence of computer hacking that could be used in the prosecution of two UK teenagers suspected of carrying out online attacks on behalf of Anonymous and LulzSec.

18-year-old Jake Davis is suspected by the authorities of being "Topiary" , the public face of the Anonymous and LulzSec hacktivist groups who was arrested earlier this month in the Shetland Islands.

Ryan Clear who was arrested in June, are remanded on police bail, prohibited from accessing the internet via a computer or phone, and have restrictions on their movements.

While neither Davis nor Cleary were at Southwark crown court for a short hearing on Tuesday morning, Judge Nicholas Lorraine-Smith said the co-defendants would need to appear at the court for a plea and case management hearing on 27 January.


It is believed the UK authorities are having to trawl through a large amount of forensic evidence to build their cases.

The FBI declined to comment on whether it has sought the extradition of the pair, whose arrests form part of an ongoing international investigation into a number of online attacks by members of the hacking collective Anonymous and the smaller group LulzSec.

Cleary is charged for DDOS Attack with zombies computers(botnet). He is also alleged to have carried out DDOS attacks against Soca, the British Phonographic Industry's website and the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry's website by making or supplying or adapting botnets.  

Davis was charged with five offences including unauthorised computer access and conspiracy to carry out a denial-of-service attack against the Serious Organised Crime Agency's (SOCA) website, which overloaded the site with traffic.


LulzSec has claimed responsibility for online attacks against Soca and the Sun newspaper, as well as targeting US authorities such as the Senate and the CIA.

Peter David Gibson, a 22-year-old student from Hartlepool, was charged in connection with online attacks related to Anonymous last Thursday. US authorities have so far arrested more than 16 people there as part of their investigation into the groups.