Mobile Version
Subscribe
Contact Us
About Us
Advertising
Editorial
SC UK
SC Aus/NZ
Home
News
Features
Opinions
News Bytes
Editorial Videos
In Focus Videos
Products
Podcasts
Canada
Newsletters
Products
Group Tests
First Looks
Products
About Reviews
Blogs
The News Team Blog
The Data Breach Blog
The SC Magazine Awards Blog
Extras
ebooks
Case Studies
Slideshows
Spotlights
Buyers Guide
Whitepapers
IT Security Jobs
Events
SC Awards U.S.
SC Congress Canada
SCWC 24/7
SC Awards Canada
SC Congress New York
Editorial Webcasts
Vendor Webcasts
Subscribe
Newsletters
Subscribe to SC
Archive
Archive
Featured Topics:
Patches
Malware
Breaches
Government
Cybercrime Corner
Congress Canada
Canada News
RSS
|
Login
|
Register
SC Magazine
>
News
> European hackers charged with DDoS attacks in the U.S.
European hackers charged with DDoS attacks in the U.S.
Angela Moscaritolo
October 07, 2008
Print
Email
Reprint
Permissions
Text:
A
|
A
|
A
Related Articles
California man admits to CastleCops DDoS attack
Hackers: Georgia on my mind
Estonian DDoS attacks ‘unlikely' in U.S., says expert
Study: Internet service providers facing more, larger threats
Kaspersky regrets hack but determines no data was leaked
Time Warner confirms DDoS
U.S. indicts NASA hacker
FTC website experiencing "technical problems"
Spammers seeking "volunteers" to DDoS White House
Related Links
FBI
More News
Trojan appears that leverages patched Microsoft Office flaw
New Chrome version contains malware download security
Microsoft issues patch plans, includes Internet Explorer fix
Standards body to certify PCI end-user experts
Breaches aided by weak passwords, poor AV detection
RELATED TOPICS
Retail
Lawbreakers & Cybercrime
DDoS
Web Service Security
More in News:
Spammer campaign exploits email read receipts
Read More >>
Two European men have been
charged
with hacking U.S. retail websites and causing more than $400,000 in damage through a series of distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks in 2003.
Lee Graham Walker, 24 of Bleys Bolton, England and Axel Gembe, 25 of Germany were each charged with one count of conspiracy and one count of intentionally damaging a computer system. Both men face up to 15 years in prison if convicted, according to a statement from the FBI's field office in Los Angeles.
Both men live outside of the United States, and warrants have been issued for their arrests, Erik Silber, an assistant U.S. attorney, told SCMagazineUS.com Tuesday.
Walker and Gembe together developed a network of computers that Gembe used to launch the attacks. They used the botnet to send a large amount of packet requests to a number of retail websites.
“The purpose was to overwhelm the websites, so that they couldn't respond to the public,” Silber said.
The plan worked — the websites crashed because they could not handle the large number of requests coming in.
The websites targeted were Rapid Satellite in Miami and Weaknees in Los Angeles. Both companies reported the attacks caused a two-week halt in their business and more than $200,000 in losses.
Walker and Gembe weren't the only individuals involved in the conspiracy, however. They were allegedly hired by Saad Echouafni, former head of satellite communications company, Orbit Communications, and associate Paul Ashley, former head of Creative Internet Techniques.
Echouafni and Ashley were charged in 2004 for their role in the conspiracy — hiring Walker and Gembe to launch the DDoS attacks against retail Echoufani's retail competitors.
“The case against Echouafni and Ashley was the first successful investigation of a large-scale DDoS attack that was waged for a commercial purpose in the United States,” an FBI statement says.
In 2005, Ashley pleaded guilty and served a two-year prison sentence. Echouafni, who goes by the alias of Jay R. Echouafni, is still
wanted
by the FBI. Authorities believe he may have fled to Morocco.
Please enable JavaScript to view the
comments powered by Disqus.
Sponsored Links
Most Popular
Most Emailed
Most Recent
FBI call gives clues into Anonymous, LulzSec probes
Anonymous raids law firm over its defense of Marine
Deadline looms to remove click-fraud malware
MasterCard announces product future around EMV
Risk: Security's new compliance
Don't let Wi-Fi hotspots get the best of you
Symantec code posted despite attempt to trap suspect
Phishing email leads to Denver area health care breach
Standards body to certify PCI end-user experts
Security vendors can no longer ignore patch management
DoD ID cards under attack
WordPress attacks try to infect users with dangerous rootkit
FINRA advises brokers to bulk up security
More source code stolen, says Symantec
Zappos breach affects 24M, opens door for more attacks
Symantec admits stolen source code impacts pcAnywhere
Risk: Security's new compliance
Google won't pull Android apps deemed malicious
Make the first 24 hours of data breach resolution count
Visa advises on more secure credit card transactions
Trojan appears that leverages patched Microsoft Office flaw
Microsoft issues patch plans, includes Internet Explorer fix
Standards body to certify PCI end-user experts
Breaches aided by weak passwords, poor AV detection
Hacktivist-led DDoS is now the most common type, study finds
Anonymous renders Canadian Nazis not-so-anonymous
Cavoukian slams Supreme Court
SDA, McAfee mark Canada's card
Symantec code posted despite attempt to trap suspect
MasterCard announces product future around EMV
Powered by Disqus
Popular Topics
Analyst Reports & Industry Surveys
Android
Anonymous
Breaches & Exposures
Canada
Data Breaches
DNS
Education
Finance
Government
Hackers
Hacktivism
Health Care
Lawbreakers & Cybercrime
Lawsuit
Legislation
LulzSec
Malware
Mobile Applications
Mobile Devices
Patch Management
PCI Compliance
SC Awards 2012
Trojans
Vulnerabilities & Flaws