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The Federal Bureau of Investigation announced that they caught Eric Council Jr., the hacker who published a fake spot bitcoin ETF approval message in January, unlawfully using the Securities and Exchange Commission X account. The post made the bitcoin price soar more than 1,000 dollars. Council is charged with conspiracy to commit aggravated identity theft and access device fraud.
“The indictment alleges that Eric Council, Jr. unlawfully accessed the SEC’s account on X by using the stolen identity of a person who had access to the account to take over their cellphone number,” Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division Nicole M. Argentieri stated in an official press release issued on October 17.
The document states that Council conspired with others to take unauthorized control of the @SECGov X account through a SIM-swapping attack. SIM-Swappin is a fraudulent account takeover that takes advantage of weak security practices. In this case, there is two-factor authentication and two-step verification, in which the second factor is a text message or call placed to a mobile telephone. The fraud exploits a mobile phone service provider’s ability to port a phone number to a different device through the SIM.
Council gained access to the SEC’s account and posted a fake message on behalf of the SEC Chair. “Today the SEC grants approval for #Bitcoin
Bitcoin
The attacker, who operated under the online aliases “Ronin
Ronin
Afterward, he bought a new iPhone with cash, using both the SIM card and the device to obtain access codes for the @SECGov X account. Council then shared these codes with other conspiracy members, enabling them to access the account and post a fraudulent post. For his role in the successful SIM swap, Council was paid in BTC.
Maybe Council regretted the attack because after he performed online searches for terms such as “SECGOV hack,” “how can I know if I’m being investigated by the FBI,” and “What are the signs that law enforcement or the FBI are investigating you even if they haven’t contacted you.”
“I don’t know if the SIM swapper is more low IQ for these internet searches or the SEC for not using 2FA”, pseudonymous security researcher ZachXBT posted on X after the arrest announcement.