‘London Blue’ BEC Cybercrime Gang Unmasked

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Publicated : 23/11/2024   Category : security


‘London Blue’ BEC Cybercrime Gang Unmasked


Security firm turned the tables on attackers targeting its chief financial officer in an email-borne financial scam.



BLACK HAT EUROPE 2018 - London - Call it karma or just poor OpSec, but a prolific global cybercrime organization recently blew its cover after inadvertently targeting executives at a security firm.
The infamous Nigerian/UK group behind a rash of business email compromise (BEC) scams found itself on the other side of its own social-engineering scam when it posed as Agari CEO Ravi Kahtod in an Aug. 7 email sent to Raymond Lim, chief financial officer at Agari, an email security company.
Agari today disclosed
details
 of both its unmasking of the group – which it has dubbed London Blue – as well as its inner workings. Security researchers at Agari flipped the equation on the attackers in an email exchange by posing as Lims assistant and drawing out enough details to drill down into the particulars of the group as well as the physical location of its operators in London.
Our email filter caught [the BEC email], says Crane Hassold, senior director of threat research at Agari and a former FBI investigator. Hassolds team was ultimately able to extract the information, coupled with its own intel-gathering, to identify the two top execs of the gang, who live in and operate out of London.
The most striking finding, Hassold says, was that the operation used at least two legitimate lead-generation services that gave them more filtered intel for targeting C-level execs around the world, rather than having to cast a wide-net phishing campaign.
The lead-generation tools let them filter possible victims by role, location, and company size, for example, he says. The group purchased subscriptions to the tools, he says, which saved them time and labor. Among one list of 306 target victims that London Blue acquired in November 2017 was Agari CFO Lim, as well as California-based CFOs from a top private university, an enterprise data storage vendor, a well-known guitar manufacturer, casinos, hotels, and some small and midsize businesses.
Overall, the group has targeted some 50,000 CFOs worldwide across 82 countries, but mostly in the US, Agari found.
Like many of todays BEC emails, the attackers didnt bother to spoof the real email domain of the target; instead, they merely displayed the name Ravi Khatod in the email header. And theres no malware required with BEC: Its mainly a social engineering exploit.
Their initial email read:
Ray, we need to make a transfer today. Let me know if you can process now and I will send info. Thanks Ravi Khatod.
Thats when the cat-and-mouse operation began. Agari researchers, posing as Lims assistant Alicia, responded:
Ravi, Raymond is out this week and I will help you with the transfer. Would you please provide me with the transfer details? Also just a reminder, as you may know, all payments go out on Wednesday, which is tomorrow. So if you need to make another transfer or payment, please inform me so that I could take care of them together before tomorrows cut-off passes. Best Regards, Alicia
The email exchange went from there, with Agari gathering more money-mule account information.
Hassold says the groups makeup of 20 to 25 individuals includes some 17 money mules spread around the US and Western Europe, and likely some members in Nigeria. At least three of the money mules have criminal records (including two sex offenders).
One transaction spotted by Agari was a $20,000 cashiers check obtained by a money mule from a large US bank. While the transaction initially triggered a potential fraud alert at a local branch, the money mule social-engineered the banks fraud prevention group into approving it.
BEC as a Business
London Blues operation includes the lead generation, lead assignments/sales, the BEC emails and social engineering, and then the movement of the pilfered funds. This is organized like a business, Hassold says. These cybercrime gangs are not just loosely affiliated low-level scammers.
BEC is becoming one of the most popular – and successful – cybercrime attacks. According to the FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center, BEC scams total some $12 billion in losses. Agari says a BEC scam typically nets four victims out of every 100 tries via email, and the average payment query is $35,000.
Agari has been working with law enforcement in the UK and US to identify the actors in London Blue, including the two top execs, who have not yet been apprehended. If they get arrested, that will take this group down, Hassold says.
London blue is an average size BEC group, he says, among the 10 or more different Nigerian BEC groups Agari is tracking. 
How did Agari convince the attackers they were falling for the scam? “They may have had a red flag during our interactions, but their financial motivation was so strong that it overrides [their hesitation], he says.
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Whos At Greatest Risk for BEC Attacks? Not the CEO
FBI: Email Account Compromise Losses Reach $12B
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‘London Blue’ BEC Cybercrime Gang Unmasked