Police bust Australia's biggest credit card scam

ПОДЕЛИТЬСЯ

Police bust Australia's biggest credit card scam Photo courtesy of ehow.com

Australian police said Thursday they had uncovered the country's biggest ever credit card data theft and smashed a Romanian syndicate allegedly behind the scam, AFP reports. An international investigation saw seven people charged in Romania with stealing the details of about 30,000 credit cards and using the information to buy goods around the world worth some Aus$30 million (US$31 million). Police reported that the data was stolen by hacking into the computer systems of around 100 small Australian retailers. It was then used to create false credit cards, enabling thousands of counterfeit transactions in numerous locations including Europe, Hong Kong and the United States. The investigation was sparked when an Australian financial institution alerted police to suspicious credit card transactions and the probe grew to involve law enforcement agencies in 13 countries. The scam culminated in 16 people being detained in raids on 26 properties across Romania on Wednesday, with seven charged. Reports in Australia said that an international wrestling champion, Gheorghe "The Carpathian Bear" Ignat, was among those held but later released. "This is the largest data breach investigation ever undertaken by Australian law enforcement," said Commander Glen McEwen, manager for Cyber Crime Operations at the Australian Federal Police. "Without the cooperation of 13 other countries, along with Australia's banking and finance sector, we would not have been able to track these illegal transactions to the criminal network in Romania. "Today's successful outcome is a culmination of 17 months of hard work with these partners." Australian banks and credit unions have reimbursed customers for their losses.

ПОДЕЛИТЬСЯ
Australian police said Thursday they had uncovered the country's biggest ever credit card data theft and smashed a Romanian syndicate allegedly behind the scam, AFP reports. An international investigation saw seven people charged in Romania with stealing the details of about 30,000 credit cards and using the information to buy goods around the world worth some Aus$30 million (US$31 million). Police reported that the data was stolen by hacking into the computer systems of around 100 small Australian retailers. It was then used to create false credit cards, enabling thousands of counterfeit transactions in numerous locations including Europe, Hong Kong and the United States. The investigation was sparked when an Australian financial institution alerted police to suspicious credit card transactions and the probe grew to involve law enforcement agencies in 13 countries. The scam culminated in 16 people being detained in raids on 26 properties across Romania on Wednesday, with seven charged. Reports in Australia said that an international wrestling champion, Gheorghe "The Carpathian Bear" Ignat, was among those held but later released. "This is the largest data breach investigation ever undertaken by Australian law enforcement," said Commander Glen McEwen, manager for Cyber Crime Operations at the Australian Federal Police. "Without the cooperation of 13 other countries, along with Australia's banking and finance sector, we would not have been able to track these illegal transactions to the criminal network in Romania. "Today's successful outcome is a culmination of 17 months of hard work with these partners." Australian banks and credit unions have reimbursed customers for their losses.
Tengrinews
Читайте также
Join Telegram
Arctic cold approaches Kazakhstan
Earthquake felt by residents of Almaty
Kazakhstan to be hit by snowfall
Flights delayed at Aktobe airport
US dollar drops sharply in Kazakhstan
Kazakhstan to raise living wage in 2026
Tenge continues to strengthen steadily
CSTO meeting has begun in Bishkek

Exchange Rates

 504.61  course up  587.93  course up  6.63  course up

 

Weather

location-current
Алматы

 

Редакция Advertising
Социальные сети