LEXINGTON, Ky. —Mikhy Farrera-Brochez, a 34-year-old man originally
from Winchester, Kentucky, was sentenced to 24 months in federal prison Friday,
by United States Chief District Judge Danny C. Reeves, for sending extortionate
communications to the Government of Singapore and its Ministry of Health and
using the means of identification of over 14,200 people as leverage in his
extortion attempt.
According to trial testimony, Farrera-Brochez obtained
access to a database belonging to the Singaporean Ministry of Health that
listed the private identifying and medical information of thousands of people
in Singapore living with HIV, including more than 50 U.S. citizens.
Farrera-Brochez sent the database to his mother in Kentucky, and retrieved it
when he returned to Kentucky in 2018.
On January 22, Farrera-Brochez sent an email to several
officials of the Government of Singapore that included three links to places on
the internet where he had put copies of the database. Farrera-Brochez made
several demands in that email. On February 18, Farrera-Brochez sent a second
email to officials of the Government of Singapore threatening to publish the
database if his demands were not met.
Farrera-Brochez was convicted on June 4. In addition to the
sentencing, Farrera-Brochez was also ordered to forfeit to the federal
government the electronic devices and Google accounts that he used in his
crimes. Upon release from prison, Farrera-Brochez will be on supervised release
for 3 years.
Robert M. Duncan, Jr., United States Attorney for the
Eastern District of Kentucky, and James Robert Brown, Jr., Special Agent in
Charge of the FBI, jointly made the announcement.
“The defendant’s conduct was serious and significant,
affecting thousands of people across the world,” said United States Attorney
Robert M. Duncan, Jr. “The defendant unlawfully obtained the private, personal
identifying information of more than 14,000 people, including American
citizens, and used this information in an attempt to extort the government of a
foreign nation. Without the hard work of
law enforcement personnel, the defendant could have caused significant
additional harm, by publishing this personal and private information.”
The investigation was conducted by the FBI with assistance
from the Kentucky State Police. The United States was represented by Assistant
United States Attorney Dmitriy Slavin and Special Assistant United States
Attorney James Chapman.
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