Caught in the Net: Australian Teens
Australian swindlers with links to Russian and Malaysian crime gangs are using a network of teenagers to transfer stolen money from overseas bank accounts they’ve hacked into online. The teens, who are paid between $150 and $400 per day, serve as middlemen, making cash withdrawals and wire transfers totaling as much as $75,000 each day, ...
Australian swindlers with links to Russian and Malaysian crime gangs are using a network of teenagers to transfer stolen money from overseas bank accounts they've hacked into online. The teens, who are paid between $150 and $400 per day, serve as middlemen, making cash withdrawals and wire transfers totaling as much as $75,000 each day, funneling the money to their criminal bosses. Police recently arrested four Australian students aged 15 to 17. "Word has gotten around on the grapevine that it's an easy way to make money," New South Wales Police Detective Superintendent Col Dyson told The Register, a London-based technology newswire.
Australian swindlers with links to Russian and Malaysian crime gangs are using a network of teenagers to transfer stolen money from overseas bank accounts they’ve hacked into online. The teens, who are paid between $150 and $400 per day, serve as middlemen, making cash withdrawals and wire transfers totaling as much as $75,000 each day, funneling the money to their criminal bosses. Police recently arrested four Australian students aged 15 to 17. "Word has gotten around on the grapevine that it’s an easy way to make money," New South Wales Police Detective Superintendent Col Dyson told The Register, a London-based technology newswire.
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