[ISN] Dutch Internet blackmailer gets 10 years

From: InfoSec News (isn@private)
Date: Thu Mar 25 2004 - 02:46:28 PST

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    http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/55/36485.html
    
    By Jan Libbenga
    Posted: 24/03/2004 
    
    A 46-year-old Dutch chip programmer who tried to blackmail dairy giant
    Campina using the most up-to-date Internet technologies, has been
    jailed for 10 years by a Dutch court on blackmail charges and five
    counts of attempted murder.
    
    The blackmailer put agricultural poison in Campina Stracciatella
    desserts in a bid to extort €200,000. To conceal his tracks he used a
    US anonymizer - a privacy service that allows users to visit web sites
    without leaving a trail. In this case, however, it didn’t quite work
    out like that.
    
    The man was convinced he was going to commit the perfect crime. He
    forced Campina to open a bank account and asked them to deposit €
    200,000. Campina was issued with a credit card for the account which
    the blackmailer intended to use to withdraw the cash.
    
    But not the original card. To avoid breaking cover, he asked Campina
    to buy a credit card reader and extract the information from the
    card's magnetic stripe. The output, together with the card's pin code,
    was sent to him electronically via steganography - a technology for
    encoding information into pictures.
    
    Campina received an envelope containing a floppy with a stego program
    and some instructions. The company then had to encode the credit card
    data into a picture of a VW Golf in an online advertisement for used
    cars. The blackmailer downloaded the picture, decoded the information
    it contained, created his own copy of the card, and finally went to
    withdraw the cash.
    
    To download the online picture, he used the Anonymizer.com service,
    believing the company’s privacy policy would protect him. Not so.  
    Dutch police worked closely with the US company and the FBI to track
    him down. He was caught red-handed last year when he withdrew the
    money from a cash machine using his copy of the credit card.
    
    Which just goes to show that even criminal masterminds can make simple
    mistakes. The error, experts say, could have been easily avoided if
    the blackmailer had visited an internet café to download the encoded
    picture, rather than using his own PC. What's more, he paid for the
    Anonymizer service through Paypal, giving his personal email address.
    
    
    
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