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Summary U.S. law enforcement officials charge 24 people involved in an international cyber hacking scheme.
U.S. law enforcement officials on Tuesday said 24 suspected hackers had been arrested on four continents in a sting operation targeting online financial fraud involving stolen credit card and bank information.The two-year investigation, in which FBI agents posed as hackers on Internet forums, prevented more than $205 million in losses on over 411,000 compromised consumer credit and debit cards, U.S. authorities in New York said.Eleven people were arrested in the United States, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Manhattan U.S. Attorneys office said. The thirteen others were arrested in countries spanning from Britain to Japan, the authorities said.Two people were arrested in the New York area, the authorities said, and appeared in Manhattan federal court later on Tuesday.One of the men, Mir Islam, known online as JoshTheGod, was charged with trafficking in 50,000 stolen credit card numbers.Authorities said Islam had admitted to helping emerging hacker group UgNazi, which said it had launched a cyber attack against the microblogging platform Twitter last week.A lawyer for Islam did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the charges.Joshua Hicks, also known as OxideDox, was charged with one count of access device fraud in a criminal complaint unsealed on Tuesday.The 24 people arrested were all men and ranged from 18 to 25-years old. Some face up to 40-years or more in prison if convicted on conspiracy to commit wire fraud charges and access device fraud charges.The FBI operation centered around a carding forum that the agency had secretly created in June 2010, and was in charge of running unbeknownst to its participants, authorities said.The forum, called Carder Profit, was essentially an online market for registered users to exchange stolen account numbers. It was shut down in May.
