WASHINGTON – Aleksandr Suvorov, of
Estonia, was sentenced today to seven years in prison for his role in two
separate hacking schemes involving a total of more than 240,000 stolen credit
card numbers.
The sentence was announced today by Assistant
Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer for the Criminal Division, U.S. Attorney for
the Eastern District of New York Loretta E. Lynch, U.S. Attorney for the
Southern District of California Laura E. Duffy and Director of the U.S. Secret
Service Mark Sullivan.
Suvorov, 28, was sentenced by U.S. District
Judge Sandra J. Feuerstein in Central Islip, N.Y. Suvorov was an accomplice to Albert
Gonzalez, one of the most prolific identity thieves ever prosecuted by the U.S.
government.
Suvorov pleaded guilty in May 2009 to a wire
fraud conspiracy charge, filed in the Eastern District of New York, for hacking
into the national restaurant chain Dave & Buster’s and stealing more than
80,000 credit card numbers. In addition,
Suvorov pleaded guilty in November 2011 to a trafficking in unauthorized access
devices charge, originally filed in the Southern District of California,
related to the sale of more than 160,000 stolen credit card numbers to an
undercover agent with the U.S. Secret Service.
The cases were consolidated in the Eastern District of New York for
sentencing. In addition to his prison
term, Suvorov was ordered to pay $675,000 in restitution and to satisfy a
$300,000 asset forfeiture judgment stemming from the New York charges.
“Mr. Suvorov participated in a scheme to sell
thousands of credit card numbers stolen from unsuspecting consumers,” said
Assistant Attorney General Breuer.
“Computer hackers like Mr. Suvorov victimize businesses and individuals,
posing a serious threat to their financial security. Today’s sentence sends a clear message that
cyber criminals operating abroad will suffer severe consequences for their
crimes.”
“Suvorov reached across an ocean to victimize
thousands of Americans,” said U.S. Attorney Lynch. “That ocean was no protection from the reach
of U.S. law enforcement, whose coordinated efforts put a stop to Suvorov and
his cohorts’ criminal scheme. He will
now serve his sentence in the country of his victims. Computer hackers and identity thieves who
prey on innocent American consumers, businesses and financial institutions will
find no refuge from U.S. criminal justice in any corner of the globe.”
“This international criminal enterprise
thought that they could traffic in stolen credit card information from abroad,
but due to the coordinated efforts of the United States Secret Service and the
Justice Department, they were wrong,” said U.S. Attorney Duffy. “The agents of the San Diego field office of
the United States Secret Service are to be commended for their investigative
work in dismantling this organization.”
“This case demonstrates the potential for
criminals to inflict significant damage to our nation’s financial sector, but
this investigation and the resulting sentences should serve as a warning to
cyber criminals that law enforcement will continue to pursue them wherever they
are,” said U.S. Secret Service Director Sullivan. “The Secret Service, in conjunction with its
many law enforcement partners across the United States and around the world,
continues to successfully combat these crimes by adapting our investigative
methodologies. We realize our success in
this investigation is due to the cooperation of these partners in more than a
dozen international law enforcement agencies.”
According to court documents, in the New York
case, Suvorov, Albert Gonzalez and a third co-conspirator devised a scheme to
gain unauthorized access into the computer systems of Dave & Buster’s Inc.
for the purposes of installing malicious software and extracting credit card
information of the Dave & Buster’s patrons.
Gonzalez, who was in Miami, sent the software, known as a “packet
sniffer,” to a co-conspirator in Ukraine.
A packet sniffer is malicious software designed, in this case, to collect
credit card information. The
co-conspirator in Ukraine then provided the packet sniffer to Suvorov in
Estonia. Suvorov, working with another
individual, gained unauthorized access to 11 Dave & Buster’s restaurants
throughout the United States, one of which was in Islandia, N.Y., and installed
the packet sniffer. Suvorov and his
co-conspirators ultimately obtained data from 81,005 credit cards.
Gonzalez was sentenced in March 2010 to 20
years in prison for his role in the Dave & Buster’s hack, as well as hacks
into a major payment processor and several retail networks. The other co-conspirator was arrested in
Turkey on related identity theft charges, and was sentenced there to 30 years
in prison.
In the California case, Suvorov and an accomplice
conspired to sell more than 160,000 stolen credit card numbers to a buyer in
San Diego who was an undercover agent with the U.S. Secret Service. Suvorov provided the stolen credit card
numbers to an accomplice, who in turn sold them to the undercover agent.
The New York case was prosecuted by Assistant
U.S. Attorney William Campos of the Eastern District of New York and Trial
Attorneys James Silver and Evan Williams of the Criminal Division’s Computer
Crime & Intellectual Property Section (CCIPS) and was investigated by the
U.S. Secret Service Criminal Investigative Division Cyber Investigations
Branch. Former CCIPS Assistant Deputy
Chief Howard Cox and Senior Counsel Kimberly Peretti also contributed significantly
to the investigation and prosecution of this case. The California case was prosecuted by
Assistant U.S. Attorney Orlando Gutierrez of the Southern District of
California and investigated by the U.S. Secret Service San Diego Field Office. The Office of International Affairs in the
Criminal Division provided significant assistance.
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