Cybercrime
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Fraud Management & Cybercrime
Malware Targeted macOS Users Visiting Patel Foundation Merchandise Page

Two months after Iran-linked hackers exfiltrated FBI Director Kash Patel’s personal email inbox, the government official’s name is tangled up in another cyber incident – this time through a MAGA swag shop he founded.
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A ClickFix attack on the Based Apparel site tried to trick shoppers into running a malicious command though a fake Cloudflare verification page on Thursday. The entire merchandise shop has been taken offline Friday.
A Twitter user named “debbie” first noted the malware. She told technology publication PCMag that she retrieved the malicious shell script payload, which was flagged malicious by 27 security vendors on VirusTotal.
The FBI in a statement said that “Based Apparel is no longer Director Patel’s website. Patel divested from any interest in it prior to being confirmed as FBI Director and does not profit from it.” Based Apparel did not respond to a request for comment.
Hackers widely believed to be a front for Iranian intelligence in March broke into a Gmail account the FBI director once used (see: Handala Hacks FBI Director Kash Patel’s Personal Email).
Based Apparel was co-founded by Patel and Andrew Ollis, a direct marketing entrepreneur who has many business ties with Patel. Although Patel resigned from the clothing store before February 2025, his name and graphics from his personal foundation are printed all over the shirts and hoodies at the shop.
The malicious page appeared to load when macOS users visited basedapparel.com/product-category/the-kash-foundation/, staging a Cloudflare turnstile that asked users to copy “I am not a robot: Cloudflare Verification ID: 801470” into their command line.
When clicking the copy button, an obfuscated line of hidden command was actually copied to the clipboard, and it would pull down an infostealer to take data from cryptocurrency wallets, session tokens, Keychain data and credentials stored in browsers.
“The ClickFix social engineering technique [is] growing in popularity, with campaigns targeting thousands of enterprise and end-user devices globally every day,” Microsoft Threat Intelligence wrote in an analysis.
