Threat Management

Russian man extradited to U.S. for ‘massive’ financial hacking campaign

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A Russian man allegedly part of a series of hacks targeting the financial industry and resulting in the theft of data on more than 80 million people, has been extradited from the nation of Georgia to the U.S., the Manhattan U.S. Attorney’s office said.

The 35-year-old Muscovite, Andrei Tyurin, was arrested for his role in what authorities called a massive hacking campaign aimed at financial institutions, brokerage firms, financial publishers and other companies in the U.S.

“Tyurin’s alleged hacking activities were so prolific, they lay claim to the largest theft of U.S. customer data from a single financial institution in history, accounting for a staggering 80 million-plus victims,” Manhattan U.S. Attorney Geoffrey S. Berman said in a statement. “Today’s extradition marks a significant milestone for law enforcement in the fight against cyber intrusions targeting our critical financial institutions.”

Prosecutors charged Tyurin with multiple crimes, including one count each of conspiracy to commit computer hacking, wire fraud count, conspiracy to commit wire and bank fraud, identity theft and four computer hacking charges.

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