Ukrainian hackers say they have compromised Russian spy who hacked Democrats in 2016

A 3D printed model of men working on computers are seen in front of displayed binary code and words "Hacker" in this illustration taken, July 5, 2021. (REUTERS)
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Updated 12 April 2023
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Ukrainian hackers say they have compromised Russian spy who hacked Democrats in 2016

  • Stefan Soesanto, a researcher at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich who has studied Ukrainian hacking groups, said the leak “looks pretty credible”

WASHINGTON: Ukrainian hackers claim to have broken into the emails of a senior Russian military spy wanted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation for hacking the Hillary Clinton campaign and other senior US Democrats ahead of Donald Trump’s election to the presidency in 2016.
In a message posted to Telegram on Monday, a group calling itself Cyber Resistance said it had stolen correspondence from Lt. Col. Sergey Morgachev, who was charged in 2018 with helping organize the hack and leak of emails from the Democratic National Committee (DNC) and the Clinton campaign.
Reuters was not immediately able to fully corroborate the claim, but some of Morgachev’s purported personal information — which the hackers shared with the Ukrainian publication InformNapalm — lines up with previously leaked data preserved by the cybersecurity research platform Constella Intelligence.
Stefan Soesanto, a researcher at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich who has studied Ukrainian hacking groups, said the leak “looks pretty credible,” noting that InformNapalm had a history of cross-checking the data it received from hackers.
InformNapalm said in an article about the breach that it had confirmed Morgachev’s identity by poring through personnel files and a curriculum vitae stolen by the hackers, including one document that identified him as a department head in Unit 26165 — the same position which the FBI accused him of holding in 2018.
Repeated messages left at email addresses and a telephone number purporting to belong to Morgachev went unreturned, and attempts by Reuters to reach him via social media and his current place of employment — said to be the sanctioned Saint Petersburg-based Special Technology Center — were not immediately successful. The Russian Embassy in Washington did not immediately return messages; neither did the FBI.
It wasn’t immediately clear what information the hackers had managed to steal or how significant it was. Morgachev’s inbox could potentially hold insight into Russia’s hacking operations, including the operation against Clinton and the Democrats.
In its indictment, the FBI described him as an officer in the Russia’s military spy agency, still known by its old acronym, GRU. It said his department was “dedicated to developing and managing malware,” including the “X-Agent” spy software used to hack the DNC.
Reuters could not immediately locate contact information for the Cyber Resistance group — one of several Ukrainian hacker gangs that have gained international visibility since Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine last year.
In its message announcing the theft, the group said of Morgachev: “A very cool and clever hacker, but ... We hacked him.”

 


Ex-prince Andrew dogged again by Epstein scandal

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Ex-prince Andrew dogged again by Epstein scandal

  • Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, as the ex-prince he is now known, has long been dogged by his links to Epstein
  • The 65-year-old Briton has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing

LONDON: Britain’s former prince Andrew was again engulfed Saturday by the Epstein scandal, after newly released files included photographs of him kneeling on all fours over a woman lying on the floor.
The images were among millions of new documents disclosed Friday by the US Justice Department from the Jeffrey Epstein files, which also featured the late sex offender proposing in 2010 that the then-prince meet a Russian woman.
That was two years after the disgraced US financier had pleaded guilty in Florida to soliciting a minor for prostitution.
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, as the ex-prince he is now known, has long been dogged by his links to Epstein, who died in 2019 by suicide in jail as he awaited trial for sex crimes against minors.
The 65-year-old Briton has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing, but stepped back from royal duties that year over their links.
Then last October, King Charles III stripped him of all his royal titles and honors after the late Epstein accuser Virginia Giuffre recounted in a posthumous memoir shocking claims against the disgraced royal.
Giuffre, a US and Australian citizen who took her own life last year, has alleged she was trafficked to have sex with Andrew three times, including twice when she was 17.
After she launched a lawsuit against him, he paid her a multi-million-pound settlement in 2022 without making any admission of guilt.

- ‘Beautiful, trustworthy’ -

The latest disclosures in Washington come with Andrew reportedly set to leave his 30-room mansion on the royal estate at Windsor imminently after Charles ousted him, and are likely to fuel further criticism.
He will also face fresh pressure to testify in the US over what he knew about Epstein’s conduct.
One of the undated pictures of Andrew and the unidentified female, both of them clothed, appears to show the former duke touching her abdomen. In another he stares, crouching over her, directly into the camera.
No context is provided for the images and it is unclear where and when they were taken.
Meanwhile, in the August 2010 email, Epstein told Andrew — addressed as “The Duke” — that he had “a friend who I think you might enjoy having dinner with” in London later that month.
In the exchanges, Epstein said the woman was “26, Russian, clevere [clever] beautiful, trustworthy,” noting that he had given her the prince’s email.
Andrew eventually replied he “would be delighted to see her.”
It is unclear if any meeting subsequently took place.

- ‘Private time’ -

Weeks later, he and Epstein appeared to discuss having dinner at Buckingham Palace after the American contacted Andrew while in London saying they needed to have some “private time.”
Andrew replied they could “have dinner at Buckingham Palace and lots of privacy.”
Two days later the ex-duke emailed again that he was “delighted for you to come here to BP (Buckingham Palace).” “Come with whomever...” he added.
It was not clear whether any dinner at the palace — then the official London residence of the late Queen Elizabeth II — ever took place.
In a 2019 BBC interview, Andrew claimed he had cut ties with Epstein after December 2010, but court documents revealed later showed he continued to communicate with him.
Other documents made public last year and Giuffre’s memoir have reignited UK anger over their ties and the claims against Andrew.
The new files also again spotlight the relationship between Epstein and former British ambassador to Washington and UK minister Peter Mandelson.
Mandelson resigned from the US post last year after emails emerged showing he had also maintained friendly contact with him after the American’s 2008 conviction.
The latest disclosures show Epstein in 2009 wired thousands of pounds to Mandelson’s husband after he had asked the American to pay for the fees for an osteopathy course.