[ISN] Ukrainian hacker to be extradited

From: InfoSec News (isn@private)
Date: Thu Dec 18 2003 - 03:24:58 PST

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    http://star-techcentral.com/tech/story.asp?file=/2003/12/17/technology/6939785&sec=technology
    
    December 17, 2003
    
    BANGKOK: A Thai court Tuesday approved the extradition of a Ukrainian
    man to the United States for alleged computer crimes, including the
    sale of counterfeit software that deprived American companies of
    millions of dollars.
    
    The extradition of Maksym Kovalchuk was ordered by Bangkok's criminal
    court, an official at the Thai attorney general's office said on
    condition of anonymity.
    
    Kovalchuk, 25, of Ternopil, Ukraine, was arrested May 20 in downtown
    Bangkok. He was carrying documents identifying him as Maksym
    Vysochanskyy.
    
    He has denied all charges.
    
    In a criminal complaint filed in San Jose, California in 2000,
    Kovalchuk was charged with trafficking in counterfeit goods, copyright
    infringement, money laundering and possession of unauthorised credit
    card information.
    
    The US attorney's office for northern California had sought his
    extradition.
    
    It alleged Kovalchuk sold counterfeit copies of software titles from
    companies such as Microsoft, Autodesk, Adobe and Macromedia through
    various websites. The retail value of the products pirated and sold,
    had they been authentic, would have been US$3mil (RM11.4mil),
    authorities said.
    
    However, a US Secret Service officer in Bangkok, James Gehr, had said
    when Kovalchuk was arrested that he had caused more than US$100mil
    (RM380mil) in losses.
    
    A US Embassy spokesman in Bangkok has previously said Kovalchuk
    pioneered a new form of Internet theft and account takeover known as
    web-spoofing.
    
    "This web-spoofing activity has accelerated identity-based Internet
    crimes in the United States and internationally," the spokesman said
    on customary condition of anonymity.
    
    The programs contained computer codes which granted him "a backdoor"  
    to businesses that installed the programs on their computers, posing
    "a huge danger" to their financial security, the spokesman said.
    
    Kovalchuk faces 20 years imprisonment and a US$500,000 (RM1.9mil) if
    convicted of money laundering, the most serious charge he faces. -- AP
    
    
    
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