Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
United States Security

US Catches Kremlin Insider Who May Have Secrets of 2016 Hack (bloomberg.com) 65

In the days before Christmas, U.S. officials in Boston unveiled insider trading charges against a Russian tech tycoon they had been pursuing for months. They accused Vladislav Klyushin, who'd been extradited from Switzerland on Dec. 18, of illegally making tens of millions of dollars trading on hacked corporate-earnings information. From a report: Yet as authorities laid out their securities fraud case, a striking portrait of the detainee emerged: Klyushin was not only an accused insider trader, but a Kremlin insider. He ran an information technology company that works with the Russian government's top echelons. Just 18 months earlier, Klyushin received a medal of honor from Russian President Vladimir Putin. The U.S. had, in its custody, the highest-level Kremlin insider handed to U.S. law enforcement in recent memory. Klyushin's cybersecurity work and Kremlin ties could make him a useful source of information for U.S. officials, according to several people familiar with Russian intelligence matters. Most critically, these people said, if he chooses to cooperate, he could provide Americans with their closest view yet of 2016 election manipulation.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

US Catches Kremlin Insider Who May Have Secrets of 2016 Hack

Comments Filter:
  • Putin can just deal for him!

  • by Anonymous Coward
    My guy won fair and square! Now, 2020, he ""lost"" but that's not possible, so that is the one that was manipulated. Not by Putin of course, since he got along well with my guy, and wasn't that great?
    • 2016 Trumps winning wasn't a surprise, the polling even showed it was close. 2016 had Clinton Leading, but within the margin of error, also Trump had bumps in polling during times when Clinton had made a mistake saying the wrong thing, or the Email scandal, Having the FBI open the questioning so close to the election caused the election to go towards Trump.
      Russian misinformation I think was a factor, but probably wouldn't have changed the results. Clinton was a name targeted by Conservative media for deca

  • And what better way to get a high profile suspect to divulge sensitive information (which may or may not lead to his or those close to him untimeli demise at the hands of known unscrupulous and murder-ish regime) than to post this widely in the mass media for all to read. Clearly a very thought through operation.

    • That's a strange idea. I don't know how things work where you come from, but here in the US you can't hide things like this.

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        That is of course uninformed nonsense. You can easily hide something like that in the US with secret courts, secret laws and NSLs. But the Swiss will not do a secret extradition, so the cat was out of the bag.

    • And what better way to get a high profile suspect to divulge sensitive information (which may or may not lead to his or those close to him untimeli demise at the hands of known unscrupulous and murder-ish regime) than to post this widely in the mass media for all to read. Clearly a very thought through operation.

      So you want the US to secretly arrest him then try him before a secret court?

      Either way, If the Russian government is relying on Bloomberg to figure out that one of their high level assets has been arrested by the US then we probably don't have to worry about their intelligence operations after all.

  • Blomberg. I call bullshit.
  • They can keep this guy for whatever dubious information they can get from him, or they can (probably) trade him for Snowden. I sincerely hope they do the former, but I'm very afraid that they'll try the latter. I think Putin has gotten just about all the mileage he can from Snowden, and would be happy to trade him.

  • Should have done minimal due diligence on his travel plans. Well, money makes some people lose sight of reality.

  • So if he provides "background", not being a technical guy, and follows the cues of US officials who want him to provide info on "the great 2016 hack by Russia!", he gets to walk free? Or if his lawyers just tease the idea that he'll cooperate, thus validating the theory that Russia! helped cheat Hillary Clinton out of her deserved win, he could earn some considerations?

    Then yeah, expect his lawyers to make the appropriate sounds.

  • Klyushin won't say anything, either on the insider trading stuff or on leaking of Kremlin secrets. He will hire expensive American lawyers who will do all the talking for him. There will be a trial, either he will walk or be convicted, and the slow roll of American criminal justice will continue through the appeals as necessary.

    I know people have been hoping for some kind of ex machina reveal that would once and for all expose Trump as a Russian colluder. At this point it's just a marker of the TDS afflict
  • Guess nobodyâ(TM)s curious about a know-nothing swamp creature winning an election he was losing in the middle of the night.
  • Oh no, I 'MAY' also know who killed Jimmy Hoffa! Fortunately, my illegal day trades of Symantec were dropped. I shall keep the secrets to myself you accusatory bunch.
  • Matt Taibbi @mtaibbi : "So: Bloomberg cites anonymous “people in Moscow who are close to the Kremlin and security services” who say this figure had “access” to documents establishing a Russian interference campaign, who could disclose them if he cooperates. Sounds rock solid!"
  • U.S. officials .. accused Vladislav Klyushin .. of illegally making tens of millions of dollars trading on hacked corporate-earnings information.

    Do you mean they guessed the next URL in a sequence and accessed the report using that before it was posted online?

    Most critically, these people said, if he chooses to cooperate, he could provide Americans with their closest view yet of 2016 election manipulation.

    Insert neocon cyber BS.

Genius is ten percent inspiration and fifty percent capital gains.

Working...