New Zealand
police are questioning a teenager suspected of being part of an international
team of cyber hackers that infected and disabled more than 1.3 million
computers in the U.S. and
the Netherlands
last year.
The FBI and police in the Netherlands
helped New Zealand police to
raid the home of the 18-year-old in the North
Island city of Hamilton. He was taken into custody along
with several computers, said Martin Kleintjes, head of the police electronic
crime center according to the Associated Press.
The teenager known as “AKILL” was the leader of an
international spybot ring that has infiltrated computers round the world with
malicious software in order to collect information such as bank account and
credit cards details.
The New Zealander is suspected to have written software that
evaded normal computer spyware systems, then sold his skills to hackers.
"He is very bright and very skilled in what he's doing. He hires his services
out to others," Kleintjes said according to the AP.
The FBI estimated that 1.3 million computers were
infiltrated and infected worldwide and more than $25 million dollars were
illegally embezzled.
The name of the teenager has not been released because he
was fewer than 18 when the alleged offenses began. He is now cooperating with
the investigators, apparently telling them how the crime system works.
"We have seized a number of computers and are talking with him. We are
going for evidence and the case will develop from there. We're still in the
early stages of the investigation," said Keintjes.
The teenager was later released after being questioned and had not been
charged yet, according to Detective Inspector Peter Devoy, the senior
investigator in the case. He hopes that the questioning will lead to
international inquires.
The teenager can be charged for having unauthorized access to computers and
possessing computer hacking tools. He can face a sentence of maximum ten years
in prison, Kleintjes said.
The case is part of an international investigation on hackers who succeed to
control thousands of computers and steal credit card information, manipulate
stock trades and even crash industry computers, authorities say.
The international investigation started in June leading to eight people
being charged.
The New Zealander is suspected of crashing a University
of Pennsylvania engineering school
server Feb. 23, 2006 together with Ryan Goldstein, 21 of Ambler, Pa. The latter was
indicted earlier this month.
According to a September report of Symantec Corp., a leading computer
security company, more than 5 million bot-infested personal computers were
detected to have at least one attack a day. China
seems to have the most infected computers, 29 percent, followed by the U.S.
at 13 percent.
However, about 43 percent of the servers used by hackers to manipulate other
computers were located in the U.S.,
according to Symantec.