
To make matters even more intense, news broke on Saturday morning that the man believed to be leading the American wing of this global-bank-robbing scheme was executed in the Dominican Republic in late April. It doesn’t take a massive stretch of the imagination to conclude that someone is trying to prevent the information that was swirling around in that man’s head—i.e., how these cyberbank robbers were able to steal so much money from the banking system, without causing any alarms that would freeze the tampered accounts they were using—from being spilled out into the hands of the authorities. When his body was found, there was $100,000 of cash in his residence, along with an assault rifle, telescopic sight, and three pistols. According to Reuters, the American operation alone, allegedly led by this dead man, netted $2.4 million in stolen cash, taken from over 3,000 ATMs, within ten hours. This part of the story alone can now be referred to simply as the second-largest bank robbery in New York’s history.From all the reports that are out now, it appears that these bank thieves hacked into two different credit card processing companies: one in India, which has admitted to a system breach, and one in the United States. Once they got in there, they accessed the companies’ prepaid credit card databases, took a bunch of the account numbers, increased their credit limits, erased their withdrawal limits, and passed that information out to people known as “cashers” who were able to create cards that would be able to access these newly tampered accounts. Between the heists in December and February, it’s alleged that over 40,000 withdrawals were processed.
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