Showing posts with label Track2. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Track2. Show all posts

Thursday, August 25, 2016

Roman Seleznev (AKA Track2 / Bulba / Zagreb / smaus) Found Guilty on 38 of 40 Charges

Roman Seleznev has been found guilty to 38 of 40 charges against him by a Seattle-based jury.  Seleznev's case created an international stir when he was arrested while vacationing in the Maldives and arraigned in July of 2014 in the US Territory of Guam (as we wrote about.  See: "Roman Seleznev (AKA Bulba, AKA Track2, AKA NCUX) appears in US Court in Guam").

According to the DOJ Press release: "Evidence presented at trial demonstrated that the malware would steal the credit card data from the point-of-sale systems and send it to other servers that Seleznev controlled in Russia, the Ukraine or in McLean, Virginia.  Seleznev then bundled the credit card information into groups called “bases” and sold the information on various “carding” websites to buyers who would then use the credit card numbers for fraudulent purchases, according to the trial evidence.  Testimony at trial revealed that Seleznev’s scheme caused 3,700 financial institutions more than $169 million in losses."

Sentencing will be held Dec 2, 2016.

Some of the charges to which he was found guilty include five counts of Bank Fraud,  eight counts of Intentional Damage to a Protected Computer, eight counts of Obtaining Information from a Protected Computer, one count of "Posession of Fifteen or More Unauthorized Access Devices" (yes, 1.7 million is more than 15!), two counts of Trafficking in Unauthorized Access Devices, and five counts of Aggravated Identity Theft.

The Seattle Case

While Seleznev was indicted in a RICO racketeering case regarding his role in the Carder.su website, the trial that concluded this week was about his personal hacking and carding campaign, beginning with his attacks against restaurants in Seattle, Washington.

According to the PACER Records, on Day 1 of the trial (August 15, 2016) the jurors were empanelled and received instructions, and the government made their opening statement.  On Day 2 the defense made their opening statement, and presented witnesses including Special Agent in Charge David Iacovetti, Andrei Medvedev, and Detective David Dunn, who also testified on Day 3.  On Day 4, Special Agents John Szydlik, David Mills, and Michael Fischlin testified.  On Day 5, witnesses included Richard Noel, Jason Winship, and Special Agents Keith Wojcieszek and Michael Fischlin. On Day 6 (August 22, 2016), C.J. Saretto, Bob Kerr, Chirstopher Forsyth, Diane Cole, Joe Angelastri, and Megan Wood testified. On Day 7, witnesses Steven Bussing, Christopher Doyle, and Sidney Fanarof testified.  The defense called a single witness, Eric Blank.

Day 8 of the trial was primarily closing arguments and jury instructions.  The jury returned their verdict on Day 9: Guilty on counts 1-10, 12-19, 21-40.  Not guilty on counts 11 and 20.

The Trial Exhibit List is amazing!  Forensic Evidence extracts from many of the restaurants involved, including Schlotsky's, Broadway Grill, Mad Pizza (5 locations), Casa Mia, Grand Central Baking, Village Pizza, Red Pepper Pizza.   Screen shots of the "Bulba.cc" and "Track2.name" webpages, including the order screen, and evidence of undercover purchases made in April 2011.  They seized the hard drives from a server hosted at Hop One's data center in Indonesia, and showed the log files for that server, as well as domain registration information for ncux.asia, ncux.tv, bulba.cc, track2.name, 2pac.cc, POSDumps.com, track2.tv, track2vip.tv, and track2.cc.  Many other emails showing that emails controlled by Seleznev were used to transact business related to all of the above were also introduced.  Posts made using the nCuX userid at Carder Planet, Carding World, Dark Market, and Carder.su were shown.  Transaction records, with IP addresses, for Liberty Reserve Accounts controlled by Seleznev were also provided.  Seleznev's laptop, iPhone, and iPad and reports of data from those devices were also provided, including a userid and password file (1Back14May.txt) and search histories and chat logs recovered from those devices.  The whole trial exhibits list is 23 pages long!

This screen shot from Bulba.cc was provided by Brian Krebs, in his story "Feds Charge Carding King in Retail Hacks" from July 2014.


The malware C&C locations from shmak.fvds.ru - located at 188.120.225.66, was where the Point of Sale malware was installed from.  According to the InfoSec Institute story, "Malware based attacks against POS systems", the malware used was BlackPOS, likely purchased from the hacker "Ree[4]" who is believed to be Rinat Shabayev, working on code developed by Sergey Taraspov.  In interviews with Russian media, Shabayev indicates that he modified and distributed the POS malware, Картоха, used in the Target breach.

While Seleznev is part of the Carders.su case in Las Vegas, the point of the separate trial was to address his use of Point of Sale malware to directly steal credit card data and sell it on websites that he created and controlled.  Just on the bulba.cc and Track2.name websites, from November 15, 2010 to February 22, 2011, Seleznev posted 200,000 credit card numbers and sold 140,000 of them, earning more than $2 million from the direct sale.

The rest of the dollar losses came from the forensic accounting that had to come next.  Given this list of cards, can we demonstrate loss due to fraudulent use of those cards.  For example, from page 10 of the indictment, just the cards stolen at the Broadway Grill -- over 32,000 cards stolen between December 1, 2009 and October 22, 2010 -- caused actual losses of $79,317.00 just at the Boeing Employees Credit Union there in Seattle, and losses to other banks of $1,175,217.37. 

Seattle Detective David Dunn, who we've written about in this blog before (See the Christopher Schroebel case), was the star witness in this case.  It was his forensics work at the Broadway Grill that started the case. By tracking the malware at the Broadway Grill, Dunn was able to then look for other Seattle properties that were also communicating to the Command & Control Server.  These turned out to include Grand Central Baking Company, four Mad Pizza restaurants, Village Pizza in Anacortes, Washington, and Casa Mia Italian restaurant.   Once Dunn realized the scope of the case, he referred other log file entries to other jurisdictions, working in his capacity as a member of the US Secret Service's Electronic Crimes Task Froce.   This led to the discovery of active malware in a Schlotzsky's Deli in Idaho, a Jewelrey store in Maine, Latitude Bar and Grill in NYC, Grand Canyon Theatre in Arizona, the Phoenix Zoo, Mary's Pizza Shack in Sonoma, California, and multiple locations in Evanston and Chicago, Illinois.

To make their case, the detectives, Special Agents, and prosecutors then had to compile all of those stolen cards and work with the financial institutions where the cards came from in order to figure out how many dollars in fraud were generated.  That's the process by which they demonstrated 3,700 financial institutions had lost more than $169 million in fraudulent charges based on the cards that Seleznev had stolen alone!

Operation Open Market

In addition to running his own exclusive carding sites as shown in the Seattle case, Seleznev was also a major player in a larger carding market known as Carders.su.   (SU is the country code for Soviet Union).  Operation Open Market is the Las Vegas case where many criminals have already been sentenced for their role in the carders.su website.  That case focused on Cameron Harrison, aka Kilobit, and 55 co-defendants, including Seleznev.  The investigation began back in March 2007 when an alert manager of a Whole Foods recognized Justin Todd Moss as someone who had used fake ID to steal from his store.  Moss turned out to be "Celtic", a seller of online ids.  Secret Service agent Mike Adams assumed Moss's online persona, and began selling counterfeit identifications to several of the people who have now found themselves in prison because of this investigation.  WIRED magazine's Kevin Poulsen has a great write-up on that aspect of the case.  (See: "The Secret Service Agent Who Collared Cybercrooks By Selling Them Fake IDs"). 

In total, at least 33 of the 56 indicted criminals have already been sentenced, although several, including at least two of the leaders, are still at large with rewards pending for their arrest.  Want to make some money?

Konstantin Lopatin, aka Graf, DOB 09/11/1982, Russian.  $1 Million reward:
 
www.state.gov/j/inl/tocrewards/c66446.htm

Roman Olegovich Zolotarev, aka Admin, aka DJ Goren, DOB: 10/20/1985. $2 Million reward
www.state.gov/j/inl/tocrewards/c66447.htm

The case was broken down into several trials. Case No: 2:12-CR-004 was specifically focused on the Carder.su activities:

Harrison, aka Kilobit was a 28 year old hacked from Augusta, Georgia, who was sentenced to 115 months in prison for his part in causing $50 Million in online identity theft trouble.  When he was arrested he was found to be in possession of 260 compromised credit and debit card numbers.  Seleznev possessed 1.7 million cards.

Alexander Kostyukov, aka Temp, aka KLBS, 29, of Miami - sentenced to 9 years on December 9, 2015

Jermaine Smith, aka SirCharlie57, aka Fairbusinessman, 34, of New Jersey - sentenced to 150 months on April 9, 2015

Makyl Haggerty, aka Wave, aka G5, 24, of Oakland, California - sentenced to 100 months on August 22, 2014

Michael Lofton, aka Killit aka Lofeazy, 36, of Las Vegas - sentenced to 24 months May 28, 2014 and 63 months on May 22, 2014 - he committed additional crimes while awaiting sentencing on the first case!

David Ray Camez, aka Bad Man, aka doctorsex, 22 years old - sentenced to 20 years in prison on May 15, 2014.


Case No: 2:12-CR-083 also was concerned with Stolen Identity Refund crimes against the IRS, but all of these were also members of carder.su:

Jason Maclaskey, aka Shinnerbock, aka That Guy, of Spring, Texas - sentenced to 10 years + 3 years supervised release on July 27, 2015.   Sentenced at the same time as Jason were Omar and Heather:

Omar Butt, aka Fear, of Brooklyn, New York - sentenced to 40 months on July 27, 2015.

Heather Dale, 25, of Grant Alabama - sentenced to 24 months.

Billy Steffey, aka Oink Oink, aka FredFlintstone, aka Yomamma,

Case No. 2:12-CR-084 included Thomas Lamb, Jonathan Vergnetti, Roger Grodesky, and John Holsheimer.

As more links to sentencing documents are found, we'll update this page.  In the meantime, to see which charges were brought against which vendors, please see "Operation Open Market: The Vendors"

Wednesday, July 09, 2014

Roman Seleznev (AKA Bulba, AKA Track2, AKA NCUX) appears in US Court in Guam

The media is buzzing about the arrest of hacker and stolen credit card vendor Roman Seleznev who has appeared in court in the US territory of Guam after being arrested in the Maldives. We wrote about Seleznev as part of the RICO racketeering case against the owners and operators of the Carder.su website. (See The Carder.su indictment: United States v. Kilobit et. al.) but that was only the first part of Seleznev's trouble. Until this weekend, the original 27-page indictment against Seleznev in the Western District of Washington was under court seal.

In the Kilobit/Las Vegas indictment, the charges are that Seleznev did "Participate in a Racketeer Influenced Corrupt Organization [RICO]" and "Participated in a Conspiracy to Engage in a Racketeer Influenced Corrupt Organization."

The whole group are described in the indictment like this:

"The defendants herein, and others known and unknown, are members of, employed by, and associates of a criminal organization, hereafter referred to as "the Carder.su organization," whose members engage in acts of identity theft and financial fraud, including, but not limited to, acts involving trafficking in stolen means of identification; trafficking in, production and use of couterfeit identification documents; identity theft; trafficking in, production and use of unauthorized and counterfeit access devices; and bank fraud; and whose members interfere with interstate and foreign commerce through acts of identity theft and financial fraud. Members and associates of the Carder.su organization operate principally in Las Vegas, Nevada, and elsewhere.

The important thing to understand about RICO is that as PART OF THE CORRUPT ORGANIZATION all of the charged members are sentenced as if the whole group did all of the crimes.

What does that mean to Seleznev? In Las Vegas, Nevada, Seleznev is being charged with being part of a RICO group that is credited with directly causing, in actual measured and aggregated fraudulent transaction losses, $50,893,166.35!!

But before Vegas gets their hands on him, Seleznev will face charges in the Western District of Washington for Case # 2:11-cr-0070-RAJ-1.

In that case, Roman Seleznev, AKA TRACK2, AKA Roman Ivanov, AKA Ruben Samvelich, AKA nCuX, AKA Bulba, AKA bandysli64, AKA smaus, AKA Zagreb, AKA shmak is charged with:

(Counts 1-5) Bank Fraud 18:1344 & 2
(6-13)  Intentional Damage to a Protected Computer 18:1030(a)(5)(A) & 1030(c)(4)(B)(i) & 2
(14-21) Obtaining InformationFrom a Protected Computer 18:1030(a)(2) & 1030(c)(2)(ii) & 2
(22) Possession of Fifteen or More Unauthorized Access Devices 18:1029(a)(3) & 1029(c)(1)(A)(i) & 2 
(23-24) Trafficking in Unauthorized Access Devices 18:1029(a)(2) & 1029(c)(1)(A)(i) & 2  
(25-29) Aggravated Identity Theft 18:1028(a)(1) & 2
This 27 page indictment, filed March 3, 2011, was just unsealed on July 6, 2014 when Seleznev appeared in court in Guam.

Washington charges that Seleznev "knowingly and willfully devised and executed and aided and abetted a scheme and artifice to defraud various financial institutions, including, but not limited to, Boeing Employees' Credit Union, Chase Bank, Capital One, Citibank, and Keybank, and to obtain moneys, funds, and credits under the custody and control of the banks by means of material false and fraudulent pretenses, representations and promises, as further described below."

Seleznev would:

  1. hack into retail businesses,
  2. install malicious computer code onto those hacked computers,
  3. and use the malware to steal credit card numbers from the victim businesses' customers
  4. market and sell the stolen credit card numbers on "criminally inspired" websites
  5. thus allowing these cards and the associated accounts to be used for fraudulent purposes by the customers of his service.
Seleznev's malware primarily was controlled from a server named shmak.fvds.ru or smaus.fvds.ru at the IP address 188.120.225.66 which is housed in a data center in the Russian Federation of Irkutsk. (That IP-name mapping is confirmed by Internet Identity's historical Passive DNS systems in May 2010.) A collection of malware found at the root site of that website, including malware named shmak, shmak2, kameo, hameo, zameo, dtc, dtc2, dtc4, rsca, remcomsvc, and others. FVDS.RU is a "third level domain" system that is attractive to criminals wishing to host malware on dedicated hostnames, without having to have their ownership of the hostname tracked in WHOIS services or through credit card payments.

Seleznev's websites for selling cards were primarily bulba.cc, secure.bulba.cc, Track2.name, and secure.Track2.name.

The targeted businesses usually had several "point of sale" terminals "up front" and a "back of the house computer" which may have been a server or perhaps even just the manager's computer.

Some of Seleznov's victims included:

The Broadway Grill - 32,000 unique credit card numbers from Dec 1, 2009 to Oct 22, 2010

Grand Central Baking Company in Seattle, WA

four Mad Pizza restaurants (three in Seattle, one in Tukwila, WA)

Village Pizza in Anacortes, WA

Casa Mia Italian in Yelm, WA.

Schlotsky's Deli in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho

Active Networks in Frostburg, MD

Days Jewelry in Waterville, Maine

Latitude Bar and Grill, NY, NY

Mary's Pizza Shack in Sonoma, CA

City News Stand in Chicago and Evanston, IL

Bulba would advertise when he had new cards for sale, claiming as many as 17,000 "Fresh Dumps" (newly stolen and never before used for fraud) cards and offering guarantees, including free card replacement for cards that were declined. Seleznev/Bulba had such high quality, that the owners of the popular crdsu.su and carder.biz allowed Seleznev and others to assume Monopoly status as the preferred card vendors for their boards, which were extremely prevalent in the underground.

According to the newly unsealed indictment, Seleznev personally stole (through his malware) more than 200,000 cards, and succesfully sold over 140,000 of those cards through his websites bulba.cc and Track2.name between November 15, 2010 and February 22, 2011, generating direct illicit profits in excess of $2,000,000 USD.

Just the cards stolen by Seleznev at the Broadway Grill have been associated with $79,317 in fraudulent charges, and all of the cards stolen by Seleznev are responsible for actual fraud charges of at least $1,175,217.37.

November 15-16, 2010, $83,490 in charges were made against Boeing Employees Credit Union cards.

Jan 31-Feb 1, 2011, $30,716 in charges against BECU.

Seleznev will have a hearing in Guam on July 22, and then be transferred to the Seattle courts.

Seleznev Diplomatic Spat with Russia?

The story is growing into an international diplomatic spat as a Russian politician and member of the Duma, Valery Seleznev, is the father of the cyber criminal. In a statement from the Russian Foreign Ministry, the Russians accuse Maldives of ignoring their Bilateral Treaty of 1999 on Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters. The statement says this is the third recent case of a similar situation, citing the examples of Viktor Bout and K.V. Yaroshenko as other recent cases where the US has forcibly taken a Russian citizen from a third country to stand trial in the United States. I strongly agree with the statement at the close of their statement, where they "strongly encourage our countryment to pay attention to the cautions posted by the Russian Foreign Ministry on their website about the risks associated with foreign travel, if there is a suspicion that U.S. law enforcement agencies can charge them with any crime."

Who are these others who are mentioned? Viktor Bout (Виктор Анатольевич Бут) was arrested in Thailand in 2008 and extradited in 2010 to stand trial for terrorism charges for delivering anti-aircraft missiles to FARC in Colombia. He was convicted by a jury in Manhattan (More from The Guardian) Konstantin Yaroshenko was arrested in May 2010 in Liberia as a cocaine smuggler pilot when he landed his plane in Monrovia, Liberia and was arrested by the DEA as he tried to negotiate a contract for $4.5 million to deliver 5 tons of cocaine from Colombia to West Africa. Yaroshenko was knowingly working with smugglers who were raising funds for the Colombian terror group FARC. (See Superseding Indictment