The U.S. Justice
Department released the below information:
One of the leaders of
the Infraud Organization pleaded guilty today to RICO conspiracy. Infraud
was an Internet-based cybercriminal enterprise engaged in the large-scale
acquisition, sale, and dissemination of stolen identities, compromised debit
and credit cards, personally identifiable information, financial and banking
information, computer malware, and other contraband. Assistant Attorney General
Brian A. Benczkowski of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division made the
announcement.
Sergey Medvedev, aka
“Stells,” “segmed,” “serjbear,” 33, of the Russian Federation, pleaded guilty
before U.S. District Court Judge James C. Mahan in the District of
Nevada. According to the indictment, the Infraud Organization was created
in October 2010 by Svyatoslav Bondarenko aka “Obnon,” “Rector,” and “Helkern,”
34, of Ukraine, to promote and grow interest in the Infraud Organization as the
premier destination for “carding”—purchasing retail items with counterfeit or
stolen credit card information—on the Internet. Under the slogan, “In
Fraud We Trust,” the organization directed traffic and potential purchasers to
the automated vending sites of its members, which served as online conduits to
traffic in stolen means of identification, stolen financial and banking
information, malware, and other illicit goods. It also provided an escrow
service to facilitate illicit digital currency transactions among its members
and employed screening protocols that purported to ensure only high quality
vendors of stolen cards, personally identifiable information, and other
contraband were permitted to advertise to members. In March 2017, there
were 10,901 registered members of the Infraud Organization.
During the course of
its seven-year history, the Infraud Organization inflicted approximately $2.2
billion in intended losses, and more than $568 million in actual losses, on a
wide swath of financial institutions, merchants, and private individuals, and
would have continued to do so for the foreseeable future if left
unchecked.
The investigation was
conducted by the Las Vegas Office of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s
Homeland Security Investigations and the Henderson, Nevada Police
Department. The Criminal Division’s Office of International Affairs
provided significant assistance in securing the defendant’s extradition from
Thailand. Deputy Chief Kelly Pearson and Trial Attorneys Chad W. McHenry
and Alexander Gottfried of the Criminal Division’s Organized Crime and Gang
Section are prosecuting the case.
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