LONDON May 2013 (AP) — International law enforcement agencies say
the recent $45 million dollar ATM heist is just one of many scams they're
fighting in an unprecedented wave of sophisticated cyber-attacks. Old-school
robberies by masked criminals are being eclipsed by stealth multimillion dollar
cybercrime operations which are catching companies and investigators by
surprise.
"We
are seeing an unprecedented number of cyber scams that include phishing for
financial data, viruses, credit card fraud and others," Marcin Skowronek,
an investigator at Europol's European Cybercrime Center in The Hague said on
Saturday.
"In
Europe, we are generally quite well protected against some types of fraud
because of the chip and pin technology we use, but there are still shops and
machines around the world who still take cards without chips. And the most
popular destinations for this type of fraud are the United States and the
Dominican Republic."
U.S.
Investigators said Thursday a gang hit cash machines in 27 countries in two
attacks — the first netting $5 million in December and then $40 million in
February 2013 in a 10-hour spree that involved about 36,000 transactions. Hackers got into bank databases, eliminated
withdrawal limits on prepaid debit cards and created access codes. Others loaded
that data onto any plastic card — even a hotel keycard — with a magnetic stripe A similar scam yielded some 50 arrests this
year in Europe during a joint police operation between Romanian police and
Europol, Skowronek said. The operation
took more than a year, involved some 400 police officers across Europe and
required work comparing bank losses to illegal transactions and then
cross-referencing suspects, said Skowronek, who said many national police
forces were beefing up their undercover work in the cyberworld to catch
criminals.
Investigators
found illegal workshops for producing devices and software to manipulate
point-of-sale terminals. Illegal electronic equipment, financial data, cloned
cards and cash were seized in raids in Britain and Romania. The group stole credit and debit card numbers
and PIN codes by implanting card reading devices and malicious software on
point-of-sale terminals. The criminals then used counterfeit payment cards with
stolen data for further illegal transactions in countries that included
Argentina, Colombia, the Dominican Republic, Japan, Mexico, South Korea, Sri
Lanka, Thailand and the United States.
Some
36,000 debit card and credit card holders in some 16 countries were affected,
Skowronek said. The amount stolen was unclear.
Bank fraud, ATM scams and phishing are common in Romania, one of the
most corrupt countries in the European Union, according to Transparency
International which monitors and measures graft. Under the late communist dictator Nicolae
Ceausescu, who was ousted and executed in 1989, Romanians specialized in
mathematics and computer coding and criminal gangs have tapped into those
skills. The tradition has continued and Romanian school students are more
advanced in mathematics than many of their European counterparts. Nadine Spanu, a spokeswoman for Romania's
anti-crime prosecutors, said Saturday she had no statement to offer on the $45
million heist or a possible Romania connection.
Skimming works when criminals place devices on ATMs that copy consumers'
card details and leave them vulnerable to fraud. There have been similar cases
in the United States and Britain.
The
EU is the world's largest market for payment card transactions and it is
estimated that organized crime groups derive more than 1.5 billion euros ($1.9
billion) a year from payment card fraud in the EU. Mike Urban, director of financial crime
solutions at Fiserv, a Brookfield-Wisconsin-based company that provides
financial technology to banks, credit unions and corporations across the world,
says banks have not caught up with the threat of electronic crime. "Compare this to a physical bank
security. If someone walks in today, they're probably not going to get very
much money, the dye pack is going to explode, they will be caught on video, they're
probably not going to get away with it, and they're probably going to spend a
long time in jail," said Urban. "Online, in the cyberworld, we're not
there yet."
One
security loophole thieves have learned to exploit is the lack of real-time
transactions in ATM-speak. Known as the
"Gone in 60 Seconds" scam, thieves deposit money and then make
coordinated cash-advance withdrawals in various places — but all in less than
60 seconds so the machines essentially regard all of the withdrawals as one
transaction. In October, 2012, some 14 people were charged following an
FBI-led investigation into the theft of more than $1 million from Citibank
using the 60-second scam. The simultaneous transactions at casinos in
California and Nevada tricked the system into thinking that they were one
transaction. Even on some joint accounts where both partners have cards for the
same account, users can often bypass withdrawal limits if the transactions are
done at the same time.
"This
type of attack might be preventable if ATM networks were able to monitor
transactions in real time for unusually large numbers of transactions involving
individual cards or cards from the same issuing institution. Unfortunately,
that type of infrastructure doesn't exist today, but perhaps it's time to consider
creating and implementing it now, especially after this latest attack,"
said Tom Cross, director of security research at the Lancope, a company
specializing in flow analysis for security and network performance based in
Alpharetta, Georgia.
Police
Maj. Gen. Pisit Paoin, chief of Thailand's Technology Crime Suppression
Division, said in a telephone interview Saturday that Thai police have arrested
more than 20 suspects involved in the $45 million cyber heist including those
from Bulgaria, Bangladesh and eastern Europe.
He said that in the latest arrest in early April, a group of Bangladeshi
and Malaysian suspects were using about 50 cards to withdraw cash from machines
in Bangkok for a month and took out about 10 million baht ($336,000).
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