US indicts Russian accused of ransomware attacks
23/5/2025 6:13
The U.S. Department of Justice on
Thursday unsealed charges against a Russian national accused of
leading the development and deployment of malicious software
that infected thousands of computers over more than a decade.
Rustam Rafailevich Gallyamov, 48, of Moscow, led a group of
cybercriminals who developed and deployed Qakbot, a name for
software that could be used to infect computers with additional
malware, such as ransomware, as well as to conscript the
computer into a botnet - or group of compromised computers and
devices controlled remotely - to be used for additional
malicious purposes, according to a DOJ statement.
Prosecutors also made public a complaint seeking the
forfeiture of more than $24 million in cryptocurrency and
traditional funds seized over the course of the investigation,
the DOJ said.
The charges of conspiracy and conspiracy to commit wire
fraud come a year and a half after an international law
enforcement operation disrupted Qakbot infrastructure. Gallyamov
continued cybercriminal activities after the disruption,
prosecutors said, as recently as January 2025.
Gallyamov did not immediately respond to a request for
comment. The DOJ statement did not indicate his whereabouts.
Also on Thursday, federal prosecutors in Los Angeles unsealed
charges against 16 people accused of developing and deploying
the DanaBot malware, which was used to infect more than 300,000
computers worldwide and cause at least $50 million in damage,
according to a DOJ statement.
The DanaBot charges are part of Operation Endgame, an
international law enforcement and private-sector campaign
targeting cybercriminal operators and infrastructure around the
world.
DanaBot emerged in 2018 as malware to steal banking
credentials and other information, but evolved to enable wider
information stealing and establish access for follow-on
activity, according to researchers with Lumen’s Black Lotus
Labs, who participated in Operation Endgame.
DanaBot remained “highly operational through 2025,” the
researchers wrote in a blog post, with roughly 1,000 daily
victims across more than 40 countries.
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