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Aventura Technologies sold Chinese-made security gear with bugs to gov’t, feds say
Commack, N.Y.-based Aventura Technologies and seven of its current and former employers - including founder Jack Cabasso were charged in Brooklyn federal court today for defrauding customers.Authorities claim the company, which counts the U.S. federal government among its customers, sold surveillance and security equipment manufactured in China even while claiming the devices were made domestically and raising security risks by hawking equipment with a “known cybersecurity vulnerability.”“Aventura
not only defrauded its customers but also exposed them to serious known
cybersecurity risks,” according U.S. Attorney Richard Donoghue at a
Thursday press conference.The 20-year-old company serves the U.S. military and as well as other government agencies and private sector organizations. It long billed its products as U.S.-made but federal prosecutors said the reality was quite different. Instead of manufacturing its equipment in a Long Island facility, the company procured it from China and then modified products to make it seem they were American made.release.Agents from various agencies showed up with a search warrant
at Aventura’s Commack headquarters Thursday and seized records, equipment and
even a boat owned by Cabasso and his wife.“There is no mistaking the cyber
vulnerabilities created when this company sold electronic surveillance products
made in the PRC, and then using those items in our government agencies and the
branches of our armed forces,” said FBI Assistant Director-in-Charge Sweeney, who
said greed was the motivation behind the scheme. “I cannot stress enough
that we will do everything we can to search out and stop any other company
willing to cut corners and pocket profits that endanger the lives of Americans,
and make this country less safe.”
“As alleged, the defendants falsely claimed for
years that their surveillance and security equipment was manufactured on Long
Island, padding their pockets with money from lucrative contracts without
regard for the risk to our country’s national security posed by secretly
peddling made-in-China electronics with known cyber vulnerabilities,”
Donoghue said in a Justice Department Get daily email updates
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