Cyber expert
who stopped ‘WannaCry’ attack arrested in U.S

Marcus Hutchins is
widely credited with helping to neutralize the global "WannaCry"
ransomware attack .
A
cyber security researcher widely credited with helping to neutralize the global
“WannaCry” ransomware attack earlier this year has been arrested on unrelated
hacking charges, according to court documents unsealed on Thursday.
Marcus
Hutchins, a 23-year-old British-based malware researcher who gained attention
in May for detecting a “kill switch” that effectively disabled
the WannaCry worm, was detained by the FBI in Las Vegas on Wednesday, a U.S.
Justice Department spokesman said.
He
was among tens of thousands of hackers who had descended on the city during the
annual Black Hat and Def Con conventions.
An
indictment filed in a U.S. District Court in Wisconsin accused Hutchins, also
known online as “MalwareTech,” of advertising, distributing and profiting from
malware code known as “Kronos” that stole online banking credentials and credit
card data.
Hutchins’
alleged activity took place between July 2014 and July 2015, according to the
indictment.
Hutchins,
who faces six counts related to Kronos, was indicted along with an unnamed
co-defendant on July 12, but the case remained under seal until Thursday, a day
after his arrest.
Hutchins
appeared before U.S. Judge Nancy Koppe in Las Vegas on Thursday. Dan Coe, a
federal public defender, told the court Hutchins “had cooperated with the
government prior to being charged.”
The
hearing was scheduled to continue Friday afternoon to determine whether he will
be represented by private legal counsel or a public defender.
Hutchins
showed no emotion as Koppe read the charges against him.
KRONOS MALWARE
Kronos
malware downloaded from email attachments left victims’ systems vulnerable to
theft of banking and credit card credentials, which could have been used to
siphon money from bank accounts.
The
indictment alleges that the unidentified co-defendant advertised the Kronos
malware on AlphaBay, a dark web marketplace that international authorities took
offline last month.
Investigators
said the site allowed anonymous users to facilitate global trade in drugs,
firearms, hacking tools and other illicit goods.
The
Justice Department said Kronos was used to steal banking systems credentials in
Canada, Germany, Poland, France, the United Kingdom and other countries.
Within
the cyber security community, Hutchins was heralded as a folk hero for his
apparent role in stopping the WannaCry attack, which infected hundreds of
thousands of computers and caused disruptions at car factories, hospitals,
shops and schools in more than 150 countries.
A
Justice Department official said his arrest was unrelated to WannaCry.
Some
security researchers and computer crime experts said they were skeptical of the
charges against Hutchins.
“The
government needs to show intent to further a crime,” said Orin Kerr, a
professor at George Washington University Law School and expert on computer
crime. “Merely creating and selling malware, on its own, isn’t enough.”









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