Chinese national extradited to US for pandemic-era Silk Typhoon attacks
A Chinese national allegedly involved in a massive, pandemic-era attack spree that compromised nearly 13,000 U.S. organizations was extradited from Italy to the United States and formally charged in federal court, the Justice Department said Monday.
Xu Zewei and his co-conspirators are accused of exploiting a string of zero-day vulnerabilities in Microsoft Exchange Server to steal research on COVID-19 vaccines, treatment and testing during the initial wave and subsequent height of the pandemic.
His alleged crimes, directed by Chinaβs intelligence services, were part of a broader espionage campaign known as HAFNIUM, which targeted infectious disease experts, law firms, universities, defense contractors and policy think tanks, according to an indictment filed against Xu and Zhang Yu, who remains at large.Β
The China state-sponsored threat group behind those attacks against Microsoft customers, and many other vendorsβ customers since, is now more widely known as Silk Typhoon.
βXu will now answer for his alleged role in HAFNIUM, a group responsible for a vast intrusion campaign directed by Chinaβs Ministry of State Security that compromised more than 12,700 U.S. organizations,β Brett Leatherman, assistant director of the FBIβs Cyber Division, said in a statement.
βHe is one of many contractors the Chinese government uses to obscure its hand in cyber operations, and others who do the same face the same risk,β he added.
Xu allegedly committed the attacks while working for Shanghai Powerock Network, one of many companies that conducted attacks for Chinaβs various intelligence services, according to court records.
Italian authorities arrested Xu at the United Statesβ request in Milan in July. His capture underscores a window of opportunity U.S. officials and allies can take when nation-state attackers travel to countries that cooperate with the United States.
Italy extradited Xu to the United States Saturday but didnβt release his extradition orders until Monday, Simona Candido, his attorney in Italy, told CyberScoop.
Officials said Monday marked Xuβs first appearance in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas. He is currently being held at a federal prison in Houston.
βWe have pursued this moment across years and continents, and the message this office sends today is the same one we sent when we first unsealed this indictment: we will work to protect the American people,β John G.E. Marck, acting U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Texas, said in a statement.
Xu allegedly worked under the direction of Chinaβs Ministry of State Securityβs Shanghai State Security Bureau to break into U.S. organizationsβ networks, steal data and implant webshells for persistent remote access. Officials also accuse Xu of stealing information regarding U.S. policymakers and government agencies from a global law firm with offices in Washington.Β
Microsoft first warned customers about the HAFNIUM campaign in March 2021. The FBI and Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency followed soon after with a joint advisory about the widespread compromise of Microsoft Exchange Server.Β
βTodayβs law enforcement action demonstrates the real-world consequences of this state-led activity, which is fueled by a vast network of private companies operating under the direction of the Chinese government,β Aaron Shraberg, senior team lead of global intelligence at Flashpoint, told CyberScoop.
βExtraditing these individuals from countries in coordination with international law enforcement demonstrates a united stance on these actions, and the importance of bringing real-world consequences to Chinaβs notorious targeting of not just the American people and their businesses, but individuals globally as well,β Shraberg added.
Xu is charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud; two counts of wire fraud; conspiracy to cause damage to and obtain information by unauthorized access to protected computers, to commit wire fraud, and to commit identity theft; two counts of obtaining information by unauthorized access to protected computers; two counts of intentional damage to a protected computer; and aggravated identity theft.Β
The 34-year-old faces up to 62 years in prison for his alleged crimes.
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