DOJ Seeks 30-Year Prison Sentence for Attempted Kavanaugh Assassin
Sept. 19 By Jan Wolfe U.S. prosecutors on Friday asked a judge to sentence the person who attempted to assassinate Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh in 2022 to at least 30 years in prison. The request from Justice Department lawyers, submitted in a court filing,…
Australian Banking Regulator Warns Geopolitical Tensions Could Lead to More Cyber Attacks
Aug. 20 By Scott Murdoch Australia’s prudential regulator has cautioned that the country’s banking system is facing increasing risk of cyberattacks as a result of escalating geopolitical tensions. Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) chair John Lonsdale said the regulator would increase its work with the…
Ransomware Group Lockbit Appears to Have Been Hacked, Analysts Say
May 8 By Raphael Satter The ransom-seeking cybercriminals behind the extortion group Lockbit appear to have suffered a breach of their own, according to a rogue post to one of the group’s websites and security analysts who follow the gang. On Wednesday one of Lockbit’s…
US Moves to Ban Cambodia’s Huione Over Alleged Money Laundering
May 2 By Tom Wilson The U.S. Treasury plans to ban Cambodian financial firm Huione Group from the U.S. financial system, deeming it of “primary money laundering concern” over its alleged role in laundering illicit funds from cyber heists and online scams. The Treasury’s Financial…
US Justice Department Unit for Drug and Food Safety Cases Being Disbanded
April 25 By Sarah N. Lynch A Justice Department unit that handles criminal and civil enforcement of U.S. food and drug safety laws is being disbanded as part of an ongoing cost-cutting campaign by President Donald Trump’s administration, according to three people familiar with the…
FBI Says Cybercrime Costs Rose to at Least $16 Billion in 2024
April 23 By Raphael Satter Cybercrime of all stripes cost victims globally more than $16 billion dollars last year, the Federal Bureau of Investigation said in a report released on Wednesday. The losses – a one-third increase over 2023 – were largely driven by low…
Maryland, Baltimore Sue Glock Over Easily-Converted Guns, Cite Violence Threat
Feb. 12 By Jonathan Stempel Maryland and the city of Baltimore sued Glock on Wednesday, seeking to force one of the country’s largest gun sellers to take steps to prevent owners from modifying its products into automatic weapons resembling machine guns. The lawsuit filed in…
Trump Pardons Silk Road Founder Ulbricht for Online Drug Scheme
Jan. 21 By Nate Raymond U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday pardoned Silk Road founder Ross Ulbricht, who was sentenced to life in prison for running an underground online marketplace where drug dealers and others conducted more than $200 million in illicit trade using bitcoin….
US Finds That Israel Is Not Impeding Assistance to Gaza; Aid Groups Disagree
Nov. 12 By Humeyra Pamuk and Daphne Psaledakis President Joe Biden’s administration has concluded that Israel is not currently impeding assistance to Gaza and therefore is not violating U.S. law, the State Department said on Tuesday, even as Washington acknowledged the humanitarian situation remained dire…
Arizona Prosecutors Drop Charges Against Disabled Black Man Who Was Violently Arrested
Oct. 18 By Brad Brooks (Reuters) – Prosecutors in Arizona have dismissed charges against a Black man who is deaf and has cerebral palsy, and who was violently arrested by police earlier this year. Bodycam footage of Tyron McAlpin’s arrest in August sparked outrage after…