A former locally-employed staff member of the U.S. Embassy
in London was charged with engaging in a hacking and cyberstalking scheme in
which, using stolen passwords, he obtained sexually explicit photographs and
other personal information from victims’ email and social media accounts, and
threatened to share the photographs and personal information unless the victims
ceded to certain demands.
Assistant Attorney General Leslie R. Caldwell of the Justice
Department’s Criminal Division, U.S. Attorney John A. Horn of the Northern
District of Georgia, Director Bill A. Miller of the U.S. Department of State’s
Diplomatic Security Service and Special Agent in Charge J. Britt Johnson of the
FBI’s Atlanta Division made the announcement.
Michael C. Ford, 36, was charged by indictment on Aug. 18,
2015, with nine counts of cyberstalking, seven counts of computer hacking to
extort and one count of wire fraud.
“According to the indictment, Ford hacked into email
accounts and extorted sexually explicit images from scores of victims,” said
Assistant Attorney General Caldwell. “As
these allegations highlight, predators use the Internet to target innocent
victims. With the help of victims and
our law enforcement partners, we will find those predators and hold them
accountable.”
“Ford is alleged to have hacked into hundreds of email
accounts and tormented women across the country, by threatening to humiliate
them unless they provided him with sexually explicit photos and videos,” said
U.S. Attorney John Horn. “This sadistic
conduct is all the more disturbing as Ford is alleged to have used the U.S.
Embassy in London as a base for his cyberstalking campaign.”
“The Diplomatic Security Service is firmly committed to
working with the Department of Justice and our other law enforcement partners
to investigate allegations of crime and to bring those who commit these crimes
to justice,” said Director Miller. “When
a public servant in a position of trust is alleged to have committed a federal
felony such as cybercrime, we vigorously investigate such claims.”
“While the allegations in this case are disturbing, it does
illustrate the willingness and commitment of the FBI and its federal partners
to aggressively follow those allegations wherever they take us,” said Special
Agent in Charge Johnson. “The FBI will
continue to provide significant resources and assets as we address complex
cyber based investigations as seen here.”
According to allegations in the indictment, from January
2013 through May 2015, Ford, using various aliases that included “David
Anderson” and “John Parsons,” engaged in a computer hacking and “sextortion”
campaign to force numerous women to provide him with personal information and
sexually explicit photographs and videos.
To do so, Ford allegedly posed as a member of the fictitious “account
deletion team” for a well-known email service provider and sent notices to
thousands of potential victims, including members of college sororities,
warning them that their accounts would be deleted if they did not provide their
passwords.
Using the passwords collected from this phishing scheme,
Ford allegedly hacked into hundreds of email and social media accounts, stole
sexually explicit photographs and personal identifying information (PII), and
saved both the photographs and PII to his personal repository.
Ford then allegedly emailed the victims and threatened to
release the photographs, which were attached to the emails, unless they
obtained videos of “sexy girls” undressing in changing rooms at pools, gyms and
clothing stores, and then sent the videos to him.
The indictment alleges that, when the victims either refused
to comply or begged Ford to leave them alone, Ford responded with additional
threats, including by reminding the victims that he knew where they lived. On several occasions, Ford allegedly followed
through with his threats by sending sexually explicit photographs to victims’
family members and friends.
During the pendency of the alleged scheme, Ford was a
civilian employee at the U.S. Embassy in London, England. He allegedly used his government-issued
computer at the U.S. Embassy to conduct the phishing, hacking and cyberstalking
activities.
The charges and allegations contained in an indictment are
merely accusations. The defendant is
presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.
The case is being investigated by the U.S. Department of
State’s Diplomatic Security Service and the FBI. The Criminal Division’s Office of
International Affairs and the U.S. Embassy in London provided assistance. The case is being prosecuted by Senior Trial
Attorney Mona Sedky of the Criminal Division’s Computer Crime and Intellectual
Property Section, Trial Attorney Jamie Perry of the Criminal Division’s Human
Rights and Special Prosecutions Section and Assistant U.S. Attorney Kamal Ghali
of the Northern District of Georgia.
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