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| FBI - Electronic Crime Task Force A Division of the US Secret Services and in conjunction with the FBI they are dedicated to hunting Cyber Criminals |
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"Shadowcrew" Internet Identity and Credit Card Thieves Plead Guilty Friday, November 18 2005 @ 06:39 AM CST Contributed by: Tommy General NewsNEWARK – Six men who administered and operated the "Shadowcrew.com" website - one of the largest online centers for trafficking in stolen credit and bank card numbers and identity information - pleaded guilty yesterday in federal court, U.S. Attorney Christopher J. Christie said. The one-stop online marketplace operated by the defendants was taken down in October 2004 by the U.S. Secret Service, closing an illicit business that trafficked in at least 1.5 million stolen credit and bank card numbers that resulted in losses in excess of $4 million. Andrew Mantovani, 23, of Scottsdale, Ariz.; Kim Taylor, 47, of Arcadia, Calif.; Jeremy Stephens, 31, of Charlotte, N.C.; Brandon Monchamp, 22, of Scottsdale, Ariz.; Omar Dhanani, 22, of Fountain Valley, Calif.; and Jeremy Zielinski, 22, of Longwood, Fla., entered guilty pleas to one count of conspiracy before U.S. District Judge William J. Martini. Judge Martini scheduled sentencings in late February and early March. The defendants admitted their respective roles in the online conspiracy to commit credit and bank card fraud, as well as identification document fraud. Mantovani also pleaded guilty to a second count of unlawful transfer of identification to facilitate criminal conduct. Mantovani admitted his role in illegally obtaining approximately 18 million e-mail accounts with associated personal identifying information. Both the conspiracy and unlawful transfer counts carry maximum prison sentences of five years and a maximum fine of $250,000. On Wednesday, Wesley Lanning, 22, of Grove City, Ohio, also pleaded guilty before Judge Martini to the conspiracy count, as did Rogerio Rodrigues 22, of Chicago, on Sept. 22. "These individuals proved in a big way that the Internet can be a dangerous place where consumers can be victimized without warning," said Christie. "But as this case also shows, criminals operating in the virtual world of the Internet are not ultimately anonymous. Their crimes can be traced and documented, and they can be tracked down, arrested, prosecuted and sent to prison." "These guilty pleas illustrate the continued success of investigations such as Operation Firewall in disrupting cyber criminal networks," said David O' Connor, Special Agent in Charge of the Secret Service's Newark Field Office. "Through the joint efforts of the Secret Service and our partners at the state, local and federal levels, we continue to aggressively investigate and successfully prosecute criminal activity that threatens our country's financial infrastructure." The Shadowcrew organization and its associated website, www.Shadowcrew.com, was a hub of online identity theft activity, facilitating online trafficking in stolen identity information and documents, as well as stolen credit and debit card numbers. A year-long investigation by the Secret Service led to the arrests of 21 individuals in the United States in October 2004. To date, 12 have pleaded guilty. Additionally, several individuals were arrested in foreign countries. The Indictment charged that the administrators, moderators, vendors and others involved with Shadowcrew conspired to provide stolen credit and bank card numbers and identity documents through the Shadowcrew marketplace. The account numbers and other items were sold by approved vendors who had been granted permission to sell by administrators and moderators of the Shadowcrew site after completing a review process. During his guilty plea, Mantovani acknowledged his role as co-founder, and administrator of the Shadowcrew website. As such, Mantovani had the power to control the direction of the organization as well as the day-to-day management of the website. He admitted using techniques such as phishing and spamming to illegally obtain credit and bank card information, which he then used to make purchases of merchandise online. The illegally obtained goods were then sent to a "drop" or mailing address specifically set up to receive the stolen goods. Some of the merchandise was then sold through E-Bay. Stephens, Taylor, Mantovani, Zielinski, Monchamp and Lanning all acknowledged that Shadowcrew members sent and received payment for illicit merchandise and services via Western Union money transfers and digital currencies such as E-Gold and Web Money. In addition, Mantovani admitted that in September 2004, he illegally acquired via computer, approximately 18 million e-mail accounts with associated usernames, passwords, dates of birth, and other personally identifying information - approximately 60,000 of which included first and last name, gender, address, city, state, country and telephone number. Lanning, was a moderator of the "Fake ID" forum, as well as a vendor of false identification documents. Lanning admitted that he encoded credit card number information onto blank plastic cards so the credit card numbers could be used to illegally obtain merchandise including gift cards. He admitted creating and selling approximately 300-400 false identification documents including false driver's licenses and health insurance cards. Dhanani, who served as a moderator on the website, outlined his role in providing an exchange service, for a fee, to Shadowcrew members, whereby the members would send him sums of cash and he would convert the cash into E-Gold electronic currency. Dhanani stated that Shadowcrew members used E-Gold to avoid traditional banking systems. Taylor, who was a moderator on the Shadowcrew website, generated false identification documents, such as fake driver's licenses, and distributed them to other Shadowcrew members. Taylor served as a reviewer of false identifications documents. A favorable written review was a prerequisite to offering such false identification documents, and other illicit merchandise, for sale on the Shadowcrew website. Stephens acknowledged his role as a moderator and vendor on the Shadowcrew site. Stephens acknowledged - as did Mantovani, Taylor, Lanning and Monchamp - acquiring stolen credit and bank card numbers from other Shadowcrew members during the course of the conspiracy. The stolen credit account numbers were then used to illegally obtain goods from retail establishments and cash from automated teller machines. Monchamp, was a moderator on the Shadowcrew website. He, like Lanning, also encoded credit card number information onto blank plastic cards so the credit card numbers could be used to illegally obtain merchandise. Monchamp also acknowledged his role in generating false identification documents, such as fake driver's licenses, and distributing these documents to other Shadowcrew members. He was a reviewer of false identification materials and vendor of false identification and counterfeit credit cards. Christie credited Special Agents of the Secret Service in Newark, under the direction of Special Agent in Charge David O'Connor, in Morristown, for their work in developing the case. The government was represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Kevin M. O'Dowd of the U.S. Attorney's Office Criminal Division, and Kimberly Kiefer Peretti from the Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section of the Department of Justice. http://www.linuxelectrons.com/articl...51118063918181
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July 12, 2006 High Prison Time For Shadowcrew Culprit By Roy Mark Another member of the notorious Shadowcrew gang that specialized in online fraud is heading to jail. Chad Hatten, 36, of Houston was sentenced Tuesday to 90 months in prison, to be followed by three years of supervised release. U.S. District Judge Lee H. Rosenthal sentenced Hatten on four counts of access device fraud. He was also sentenced to 24 additional months for aggravated identity theft, which will be served consecutively with the access device fraud counts. According to the Department of Justice, Hatton, who admitted to being a member of the gang, used the Shadowcrew Web site to assist with his credit card fraud activities. He also purchased gift cards from retail stores using counterfeit credit cards and resold the gift cards at a discount. In addition, Hatten was also charged with possessing equipment used to encode counterfeit credit cards with stolen numbers. In November, Hatten entered a plea of guilty to a five-count superseding indictment charging him with four counts of access device fraud and one count of aggravated identity theft. Internetnews.com profiled the Shadowcrew activities in a September 2002 story. Soon after that story appeared, members of Shadowcrew launched a Denial of Service attack against internetnews.com and demanded it be removed. The story was not removed and officials of Jupitermedia contacted law enforcement officials who opened an investigation that eventually became known as Operation Firewall. Two years later, U.S. Secret Service agents made 28 arrests in eight states and six countries stemming from its investigation. Members of the Shadowcrew bulletin board openly discussed online fraud techniques and boasted they were safe from prosecution because they used anonymous remailers and proxies to hide their identities. Before Secret Service agents shut down the operation, the Shadowcrew site trafficked in at least 1.5 million stolen credit and debit card numbers, causing losses in excess of $4 million to the issuing institutions. Source: InternetNews.com |
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