Artem Aleksandrovych Stryzhak, a 35-year-old Ukrainian national, pleaded guilty Friday to multiple crimes stemming from his involvement in a string of ransomware attacks targeting U.S. and Europe-based organizations from mid 2018 to late 2021. He faces up to 10 years in jail for conspiracy to commit fraud, including extortion.
Stryzhak was arrested in Spain in June 2024 and extradited to the United States in April. Authorities are still looking for his alleged co-conspirator Volodymyr Tymoshchuk and announced a $11 million reward for information leading to his arrest or conviction.
“The defendant used Nefilim ransomware to target high-revenue companies in the United States, steal data and extort victims,” Joseph Nocella, U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of New York, said in a statement.
“We remain determined to capture Stryzhak’s codefendant and partner in crime, Volodymyr Tymoshchuk, and bring him to justice in a U.S. courtroom,” Nocella added. Officials accuse Tymoshchuk of acting as an administrator of the Nefilim ransomware group and described him as a serial cybercriminal associated with multiple ransomware strains.
Attacks involving Nefilim ransomware caused millions of dollars in losses from extortion payments and damage to victim networks, officials said. Stryzhak and his co-conspirators allegedly customized executable ransomware files for each victim, creating unique decryption keys and unique ransom notes.
The ransomware group primarily targeted companies located in the United States, Canada and Australia with more than $100 million in annual revenue, and extorted victims by threatening to publish stolen data. The crew researched companies after they broke into their networks to determine their net worth, size and contact information.
Stryzhak’s victims in the U.S. include an engineering consulting company based in France, an aviation industry company in New York, a chemical company in Ohio, an insurance company in Illinois, a company in the construction industry in Texas, a pet care company in Missouri, an international eyewear company and a company in the oil and gas transportation industry.
Stryzhak and his co-conspirators also used Nefilim ransomware to encrypt victim networks in Germany, the Netherlands, Norway and Switzerland, prosecutors said.
Officials said Stryzhak’s crimes began when he gained access to the Nefilim ransomware code in June 2021 in exchange for 20% of his ransom proceeds.
“Cybercriminals may hide behind screens, but they leave digital footprints everywhere,” Christopher Johnson, special agent in charge of the FBI’s field office in Springfield, Illinois, said in a statement.
“The FBI follows these digital trails relentlessly — across networks, borders, and time — until those responsible are held accountable,” Johnson added. “Today is a remarkable accomplishment, but we will not stop until we have captured all those responsible for the Nefilim ransomware.”
The post Ukrainian national pleads guilty to Nefilim ransomware attacks appeared first on CyberScoop.
–
Read More – CyberScoop



