Russian Hacker Pleads Guilty in Stock Market Fraud Case | Avast

Russian Hacker Pleads Guilty in Stock Market Fraud Case | Avast
Jeff Elder, 28 September 2019

Financial institutions and a news agency were used to artificially inflate the value of a stock



This week a Russian hacker pleaded guilty in what the U.S. Department of Justice called “a massive computer hacking campaign targeting U.S. financial institutions, brokerage firms, financial news publishers, and other companies.” 
The Southern District of New York case includes dramatic events in which Andrei Tyurin made “an effort to artificially inflate the price of certain stocks” and then “marketed the stocks in a deceptive and misleading manner” to customers whose contact information he stole from companies including an unnamed major financial news agency.     "We are not talking about a typical data theft cybercrime. These are really elaborate plots that involve corporate espionage and the spreading of rumors and fake news." – Avast Cybersecurity Evangelist Luis Corrons Tyurin’s attorney, Florian Miedel, said in a statement sent to the Avast Blog that his client was “hired by the originators and brains of the scheme” and that he “played a limited role in this far-reaching conspiracy.”
The hacker was charged with other suspects, including Gery Shalon, whom the DOJ identified as operating various criminal enterprises. A DOJ spokeswoman told the Avast Blog that only Tyurin took a plea bargain deal. It is unclear how much he is cooperating with prosecutors. He is scheduled to be sentenced in February.     
This is not the first time hackers have attempted a large-scale hack of stocks and financial systems. In January, the Securities and Exchange Commission brought charges against nine defendants in a scheme to hack into the SEC’s computer system and newswire services. The threat that h ..

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