Cybercrime
,
Fraud Management & Cybercrime
,
ID Fraud
Justice Department Dismantles Cybercrime Hub, Announces Charges and Seizes Crypto
The United States Justice Department has taken control of PopeyeTools, a notorious online marketplace dedicated to carrying out cybercrime, fraud and selling stolen credit cards.
See Also: OnDemand | 2024 Phishing Insights: What 11.9 Million User Behaviors Reveal About Your Risk
The department announced Wednesday the seizure of the illicit PopeyeTools website and criminal charges against three alleged administrators: Abdul Ghaffar, 25, Abdul Sami, 35, and Javed Mirza, 37. The two Pakistanis and an Afghan are charged with conspiracy, trafficking and solicitation related to access devices.
Nicole Argentieri, head of the Justice Department’s criminal division, said in a statement the three men “founded and ran a longstanding online marketplace that sold illicit goods and services for use in committing cybercrimes, including ransomware attacks and financial frauds.”
PopeyeTools quickly became a popular online marketplace for cybercrime transactions beginning around 2016, according to the federal affidavit that led to the platform’s seizure. The Justice Department said the site helped sell the personally identifiable information or device access credentials for least 227,000 people and generated over $1.7 million in revenue.
PopeyeTools promised “quality not quantity,” allegedly vowing to refund sales for invalid credit cards and offering customers services to validate bank account and credit card information through the website. One section of the site sold payment data and personally identifiable information for validated cards for approximately $30 each.
Special Agent in Charge Matthew Miraglia of the FBI Buffalo field office said the dismantling of PopeyeTools was “a direct result of the FBI’s dedication to weaken cybercrime.”
The U.S. also obtained judicial authorization to seize approximately $283,000 in cryptocurrency from an account controlled by Sami. If convicted, Ghaffar, Sami and Mirza each face up to 10 years in prison for each of the three access device offenses.
Argentieri said taking control of the platform, announcing criminal charges and seizing the crypto funds was an example of the department’s “‘all-tools’ approach to combatting cybercrime.”