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NY Fed to assist Bangladesh in cyber-heist lawsuit

3 || risingbd.com

Published: 07:49, 2 February 2019   Update: 15:18, 26 July 2020
NY Fed to assist Bangladesh in cyber-heist lawsuit

International Desk: The Federal Reserve will lend a hand to Bangladesh’s central bank as it sues to recoup losses from one of the world’s largest cyber heists, even while the Philippine bank targeted by the lawsuit on Friday called it baseless and beyond U.S. jurisdiction.

The New York Fed’s formal agreement to provide “technical assistance” could spell some relief for Bangladesh Bank and sets the stage for its long-promised litigation over the February 2016 heist of $81 million, of which only $15 million has been recovered.

Unidentified hackers pulled off the heist by breaching Bangladesh’s systems and using the SWIFT global payments network to send fraudulent orders to the New York branch of the U.S. central bank, which oversees the account and was tricked into releasing the funds.

Of nearly $1 billion requested, $81 million was sent to accounts at Manila-based bank Rizal Commercial Banking Corp (RCBC) and then mostly vanished into Philippines casinos.

A person familiar with the “resolution and assistance” agreement told Reuters the New York Fed would prepare affidavits and clear employees to testify at hearings or a trial, and also allow Bangladesh Bank representatives to interview employees on relevant and factual matters.

On Thursday, in U.S. District Court in Manhattan, Bangladesh Bank sued RCBC and accused it and dozens of others, including several top executives, of involvement in a “massive” and “intricately planned” multiyear conspiracy to steal its money.

Bangladesh Bank alleged funds were stolen with the help of unnamed North Korean hackers who used malware with such names as “Nestegg” and “Macktruck” to obtain backdoor access to its network.

Separately, the U.S. government in September charged a North Korean man it alleged was responsible for the Bangladesh incident and other heists, and detailed the ease with which hackers phished Bangladesh Bank employees.

A 2016 Reuters investigatihere into the heist found that a series of missteps and miscommunications between the Fed and Bangladesh, little emergency backup, and slow reactions in New York to early warning signs all contributed.

Some 250 foreign central banks and governments keep more than $3 trillion of their assets at the New York Fed.

Under the agreement struck this week, the New York Fed would provide relevant non-privileged documents and information to Bangladesh Bank or to the court, and serve as consulting or testifying expert, according to the person familiar with it.

It also commits the New York Fed and Bangladesh Bank to “meeting jointly with the relevant agencies or parties in the Philippines to strongly encourage them to assist in the recovery of stolen funds,” they said in a joint statement, adding the fraud “represents a threat to the international funds transfer system.”

Source: reuters.com


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