A May 28 indictment unsealed Monday identifies four Chinese nationals as suspects in an international hacking scheme. COURTESY PHOTO Â
SAN DIEGO â A federal grand jury returned an indictment charging four nationals and residents of the Peopleâs Republic of China with a campaign to hack into the computer systems of dozens of victim companies, universities and government entities in the United States and abroad between 2011 and 2018, U.S. Attorneyâs Office for the Southern District of California announced at a press conference Monday.
The indictment, which was returned May 28 and unsealed by court order on Monday, alleges that much of the conspiracyâs theft was focused on information that was of significant economic benefit to Chinaâs companies and commercial sectors, including information that would allow the circumvention of lengthy and resource-intensive research and development processes.
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The Federal Bureau of Investigation, FBI has described the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, as a critical partner in the global fight against organized crime and corruption that needed to be commended for its professionalism.
According to EFCC, the Legal Attaché of the FBI, Uche Ahamdi made the commendation on Thursday May 6, 2021 when he led a delegation on a courtesy visit to the Enugu Zonal Head of the Commission, Oshodi Johnson in his office at Independence Layout, Enugu.
“EFCC is a critical partner to the FBI and they have certain capacities in this fight against crime and are doing very well and we believe that if more values are added to their work, they would do even more. So, our visit is to strengthen our collaborative information sharing between,” he said.
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Washington, DC - A federal court entered an order of permanent injunction against an individual and five companies in a case against a large-scale technical-support fraud scheme alleged to have defrauded hundreds of elderly and vulnerable U.S. victims, the Department of Justice announced Tuesday.
The order bars Michael Brian Cotter, 59, of Glendale, California, and four companies Singapore registered Global Digital Concierge Pte. Ltd., formerly known as Tech Live Connect Pte. Ltd., Nevada registered companies Sensei Ventures Incorporated and NE Labs Inc., New York registered KeviSoft LLC from selling technical-support services or software via telemarketing or websites.
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A federal court entered an order of permanent injunction against an individual and five companies in a case against a large-scale technical-support fraud scheme alleged to have defrauded hundreds of elderly and vulnerable U.S. victims, the Department of Justice announced today.
The order bars Michael Brian Cotter, 59, of Glendale, California, and four companies
Singapore registered Global Digital Concierge Pte. Ltd., formerly known as Tech Live Connect Pte. Ltd.,
Nevada registered companies Sensei Ventures Incorporated
and NE Labs Inc., New York registered KeviSoft LLC from selling technical-support services or software via telemarketing or websites.
Acting Assistant Attorney General Jeffrey Bossert Clark for the Civil Division, said: