Card Not Present Fraud
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Cybercrime
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Fraud Management & Cybercrime
Unemployed Defendants Allegedly Bought Luxury Car, Lived in Beach House
U.S. law enforcement charged two alleged masterminds of one of the largest Russian-language cybercrime forums after they claimed asylum inside the United States and lived a luxurious life in Miami despite their evident lack of employment.
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Federal authorities accused Russian national Pavel Kublitskii and Kazak national Alexandr Khodyrev of acting as administrators of carding platform WWH-Club as well as similar sites Skynetzone, Opencard and Center-Club.
A Florida federal judge approved arrest warrants for the two, which led the FBI to detain Khodyrev on Thursday. Khodyrev posted $225,000 in bail and agreed to home detention, GPS monitoring and heavy restrictions on internet usage. He made bail in part by surrendering his Mercedes-AMG G 63 sports utility vehicle. The court docket does not show Kublitskii has been arrested. Representatives for the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Florida did not return multiple attempts to reach them.
In business since 2012, according to Flashpoint, WWH-Club distinguished itself as a forum to discuss payment card fraud and by offering tutorials in carding skills. Its admins also earned revenue from an escrow service and by selling ads. A course lasted around six weeks, cost about $975 and included homework and exams. A commercial post could cost up to $780, Flashpoint found. A bitcoin cluster associated with forum administrators received deposits worth nearly $1 million over a little less than a decade.
Kublitskii and Khodyrev allegedly operated through the common profile name of “Makein” and were part of every aspect of WWH-Club’s operations, from rule enforcement to infrastructure management. Site administrators attempted to evade law enforcement by building decentralized server networks and changing IP addresses often, the complaint says. Web domains associated with the carding operation as of Monday don’t appear to be functioning.
Prosecutors say the duo arrived together in South Florida, where they claimed asylum, and each provided the same Miami-area address to authorities. Kublitskii rented a beachside condo while Khodyrev in 2023 purchased a Corvette for $110,000, in cash. “While it does not appear either subject has employment in the U.S., both subjects are using substantial amount of cash to fund an affluent lifestyle,” an FBI agent said in an affidavit.
Federal agents say they tracked the pair down by obtaining in July 2020 an image of the server hosting wwh-club.ws
after tracing its IP address to data centers owned by U.S.-based DigitalOcean. Using Google Translate and a reconstructed SQL database, agents were able to obtain email addresses of user accounts and determine their privilege level and their passwords.
Based on the server image, WWH-Club appeared to have approximately 170,000 registered users, including seven administrators. Another 32 users had “staff” privileges,” and 29 could moderate posts.
As is typical of Russian-speaking hacking operations, the forum prohibited members from conducting criminal activities inside the Commonwealth of Independent States, a Russia-dominated regional association consisting of former countries formerly a part of the Soviet Union.
The defendants face charges of conspiracy to traffic in unauthorized access devices and conspiracy to possess 15 or more unauthorized access devices, each of which has a maximum sentence of 10 years.