Sports Piracy Operator Goes From Jail To Getting Hired By a Tech Unicorn In a Month
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Streameast, the most popular and largest illicit live sports streaming network, was shut down following a coordinated law enforcement action conducted by Egyptian authorities last month, an antipiracy coalition of entertainment companies announced Wednesday.
Egyptian authorities seized infrastructure powering Streameast and arrested two operators at their residences in El-Sheik Zaid, Egypt, a spokesperson for the Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment told CyberScoop.
Streameast operated 80 domains and logged more than 1.6 billion visits during the past year, driving more than 136 million monthly average visits, according to the association of about 50 entertainment companies, film and TV studios.
A team of 22 Egyptian police officers participated in the Aug. 24 raid, confiscating three laptops and four smartphones that were used for Streameastβs operations. Authorities also seized 10 Visa cards containing about $123,000 in funds, the spokesperson said.
Streameast offered pirated access to major live sports broadcasts, including Europeβs top soccer leagues, the National Football League, the National Basketball Association, Major League Baseball, the National Hockey League and Major League Soccer. The network also ran sites for pay-per-view boxing matches, mixed martial arts and motorsports.
βWith this landmark action, we have put more points on the board for sports leagues, entertainment companies, and fans worldwide β and our global alliance will stay on the field as long as it takes to identify and target the biggest piracy rings across the globe,β Charles Rivkin, chairman of ACE and chairman and CEO of the Motion Picture Association, said in a statement.Β
Pirated networks, similar to other digital crime enterprises, are difficult to keep offline. New sites crop up often and operators can regroup after disruptions and reconstitute under new domains and infrastructure.Β
βItβs not uncommon for copycat operations to appear following the takedown of a notorious piracy site, and itβs difficult to predict to what extent this might happen,β the spokesperson for ACE said. βACE remains actively engaged with Egyptian authorities and we continue monitoring the landscape.β
The majority of Streameastβs traffic originated from the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, the Philippines and Germany.
ACE claims global digital piracy impacts the U.S. economy to the tune of $29.2 billion and 230,000 jobs lost annually. The coalition said more than 2,500 illegal sites are taken down daily.
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French authorities extradited a 39-year-old Nigerian national to the United States Monday for allegedly hacking into tax preparation businesses and participating in a years-long conspiracy to defraud the Internal Revenue Service and state tax agencies.
Chukwuemeka Victor Amachukwu and his Nigeria-based co-conspirators, including Kinglsey Uchelue Utulu, are accused of obtaining about $2.5 million in fraudulent tax refunds from 2019 to 2023, the Justice Department said Tuesday. The conspirators sought fraudulent tax refunds of at least $8.4 million, according to prosecutors.
βAmachukwu allegedly operated multiple illicit fraud schemes β identity theft, computer intrusions via spearphishing, and false investments β profiting at the costs of others,β said FBI Assistant Director in Charge Christopher G. Raia said in a statement.
Prosecutors accuse Amachukwu and his co-conspirators of accessing computer systems of tax preparation businesses in New York, Texas and other states via spearphishing emails. The cybercrime crew allegedly filed false tax returns with federal and state authorities using identities stolen from the victim organizations.Β
In one of those attacks, in May 2021, members of the conspiracy sent a spearfishing email to an employee of a New York-based tax preparation business, which infected the firmβs computer systems with malware, according to an unsealed indictment.
Authorities said Amachukwu and his co-conspirators also used the stolen identities to file fraudulent claims with the Small Business Administrationβs Economic Injury Disaster Loan program, obtaining at least $819,000 in payouts.
Amachukwu faces up to 47 years in prison for multiple charges, including conspiracy to commit computer intrusions, two counts of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, two counts of wire fraud and aggravated identity theft.
βAmachukwu also allegedly took part in a separate fraud scheme that promised his victims valuable investments that did not in fact exist,β U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton said in a statement. Officials said Amachukwu stole millions of dollars of his victimsβ money from this scheme.
The FBI, Justice Departmentβs Office of International Affairs and the U.S. Marshals Service assisted the investigation, which led to Amachukwuβs arrest and extradition from France.
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