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posted by Fnord666 on Wednesday August 28 2019, @12:14PM   Printer-friendly
from the making-amends(involuntarily) dept.

Submitted via IRC for Bytram

Police to sell hacker's $1.1 million Bitcoin stash to compensate victims

UK police have seized over £920,000 ($1.1 million) worth of Bitcoin from a convicted hacker, which they plan to sell and compensate past victims.

The hacker, named Grant West, was arrested back in September 2017, and he pleaded guilty three months later in December. Earlier this year, a UK court sentenced West to 10 years and eight months in prison for multiple hacking and drug-related crimes.

Authorities said West used a tool called Sentry MBR to launch brute-force attacks against 17 companies, where he gained access to user accounts, which he later hijacked and resold on the dark web to other criminals.

London police said the list of victims included some high profile names such as Uber, Groupon, T Mobile, Just Eat, Asda, and Sainsburys; but also the likes of Ladbrokes, Argos, Nectar, AO.com, Coral Betting, Vitality, RS Feva Class Association 2017, the British Cardiovascular Society, Mighty Deals Limited, and M R Porter.

Authorities said West, who used the moniker of "Courvoisier," started trading stolen accounts on the dark web in March 2015, and made more than 47,000 sales before his arrest.

[...] He was arrested in the Ashcroft Caravan Park in Minster on the Isle of Sheppey following a years-long investigation authorities codenamed "Operation Draba." After his arrest and subsequent search of his trailer, authorities said they found £25,000 ($30,000), the drugs he was selling online, but also "a significant amount of bitcoins."

Now, Met Police have disclosed the Bitcoin sum they found, along with plans to use it to compensate victims.

Initially, West didn't want to give up his Bitcoin. However, the judge told him he'd spend an additional four years in prison if he didn't, according to a report from The Guardian.


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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by JoeMerchant on Wednesday August 28 2019, @01:04PM (5 children)

    by JoeMerchant (3937) on Wednesday August 28 2019, @01:04PM (#886758)

    If the criminal stole $1M from victims and spent $500K on hookers and blow, you'd expect the victims to receive something less than $0.50 on the dollar in restitution...

    However, if the criminal steals $100K from victims, and invests it in BTC and it makes 10x gains, does that mean the victims receive closer to $10 on the dollar in restitution?

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  • (Score: 2) by All Your Lawn Are Belong To Us on Wednesday August 28 2019, @01:40PM

    by All Your Lawn Are Belong To Us (6553) on Wednesday August 28 2019, @01:40PM (#886774) Journal

    Interesting question. But I'd think the amount would be fairer to be $100K + interest compounded for the periods of loss. Then hold on to the rest to pay out all the civil suits against the guy for the suffering.

    It's one of these tempted-if-its-all-true to say this is justice. Also tempted to say strongarm coercion to avoid jail time isn't a fair way to administer justice. We have a conundrum. Kif, search him for paper! And bring me a rock! And blackjack, and hookers! Oh, forget the rock!

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  • (Score: 2) by richtopia on Wednesday August 28 2019, @02:05PM

    by richtopia (3160) on Wednesday August 28 2019, @02:05PM (#886786) Homepage Journal

    Do the police regularly compensate the victims? I honestly don't know; I assumed that insurance would cover the losses.

    I'm also not sure what the standard behaviour is for criminal assets in the UK or US. If cash is discovered and clearly associated with theft, is it held as evidence? Who determines what asset is associated with a theft and what is a personal asset, which is suddenly very relevant for hiring legal advice? While the article says police are selling the bitcoin, I assume the sale and compensation is mandated by the court, as the summary also stipulates that the sale alleviates jail time.

  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by zocalo on Wednesday August 28 2019, @02:11PM

    by zocalo (302) on Wednesday August 28 2019, @02:11PM (#886792)
    Generally, it's phrased as something like "forfeiture of proceeds" or whatever the correct legal term is in the juridiction concerned, and includes any assets procured using those ill-gotten gains - e.g. things like art, cars, jewelry, and property, which might have appreciated in value since purchase. If, instead of blowing $500k on hookers and blow, they had invested it and made financial gains then I think it's reasonable to consider that those gains are directly derived from illegal activities and could thus be considered as eligible for forfeiture. If they weren't careful with the laundry then they may even have opened themselves up to charges of tax evasion on capital gains as well.
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  • (Score: 2) by Spamalope on Wednesday August 28 2019, @03:25PM (1 child)

    by Spamalope (5233) on Wednesday August 28 2019, @03:25PM (#886836) Homepage

    Lawyers costs will be inflated until the entire recovered sum is consumed. Natch.

    • (Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Wednesday August 28 2019, @04:03PM

      by JoeMerchant (3937) on Wednesday August 28 2019, @04:03PM (#886854)

      This is what happens when you elect lawyers to the legislature - there ought to be a separation of bar and bill voters.

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