Articles Tagged: Cybercrime
The Justice Department has extradited 19-year-old Peter Stokes from Finland to the United States, where he now faces federal criminal charges in Chicago tied to the alleged cybercrime group known as Scattered Spider. According to the unsealed criminal complaint, prosecutors are pursuing conspiracy, computer intrusion, and fraud counts in what is shaping up to be one of the more closely watched federal cyber prosecutions of the moment.
The case is significant not only because of the group allegedly involved, but also because it highlights the increasingly international nature of cyber enforcement.
A Ukrainian national’s guilty plea in connection with the Conti ransomware operation marks another notable step in the Justice Department’s long-running effort to pursue transnational cybercrime actors through traditional criminal statutes. According to federal prosecutors, the defendant admitted participating in a wire fraud conspiracy tied to the Conti group, one of the most disruptive ransomware organizations to target businesses and institutions worldwide.
The plea is legally significant because it reinforces the government’s willingness to use conspiracy and fraud theories to reach conduct that often spans multiple jurisdictions, anonymous infrastructure, and decentralized criminal networks.
The Department of Justice highlighted two very different but equally consequential criminal matters this week: a jury conviction in Virginia tied to the deletion of U.S. government databases, and a guilty plea in a terrorism case involving an alleged ISIS-inspired plot targeting a Jewish center in Brooklyn. Taken together, the cases show DOJ’s continued focus on cyber-related insider threats and national-security prosecutions with international dimensions.
In the Eastern District of Virginia, federal prosecutors announced that a jury convicted Sohaib Akhter of Alexandria on charges connected to the deletion of U.S. government databases.


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