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posted by cmn32480 on Friday June 26 2015, @12:12AM   Printer-friendly
from the show-me-the-money dept.

The U.S. will get a rare chance to prosecute one of the world's most-wanted cybercriminal suspects with the extradition of a Turkish man accused of orchestrating a global operation to hack automated teller machines.

Ercan Findikoglu, 33, boarded a flight to New York on Tuesday after losing his fight against extradition from a German prison, according to a law enforcement official who asked for anonymity because the operation wasn't yet public. He was arrested during a trip to Frankfurt by German authorities in December 2013 after eluding U.S. capture for five years.

Findikoglu allegedly organized a criminal operation that stole $40 million in cash from ATMs within 10 hours in February 2013 in New York City and 23 other countries, according to a ruling in his extradition case from the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany. The so-called unlimited cash out operations used hacked debit cards with withdrawal limits removed to make ATMs spew money.


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  • (Score: 3, Funny) by Empyrean on Friday June 26 2015, @03:13AM

    by Empyrean (5241) on Friday June 26 2015, @03:13AM (#201368)

    No doubt he will receive a fair trial in the US.

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  • (Score: 2) by CirclesInSand on Friday June 26 2015, @04:09PM

    by CirclesInSand (2899) on Friday June 26 2015, @04:09PM (#201565)

    I don't know about that. They're probably going to be quite upset with him for casting doubt on our 100% reliable, secure, honest, sustainable, and fair American banking system.