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Thursday, March 28, 2024 | Back issues
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Dubai Police Arrest Hackers After White House Staff

Dubai police have arrested foreign hackers who targeted five senior White House officials in a blackmail email scam, state-owned media reported on Monday.

JON GAMBRELL, AP

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Dubai police have arrested foreign hackers who targeted five senior White House officials in a blackmail email scam, state-owned media reported on Monday.

The Arabic-language Al Bayan newspaper and the television channel Dubai One reported the arrests, while Dubai police did not answer repeated calls for comment. The arrests come as the United Arab Emirates, which hosts some 4,000 U.S. troops fighting the Islamic State group, remains a crucial regional ally.

The White House had no immediate comment on the reports, whose details closely resembled a previously announced 2015 raid in which Emirati authorities never mentioned a connection to Washington.

Al Bayan quoted Maj. Saud al-Khalidi of Dubai police's cybercrime division as saying an "African gang" broke into the emails of the five senior officials and "got highly confidential information." He said the hackers then demanded money from their targets in threatening emails. The U.S. then asked Dubai police for assistance.

Al-Khalidi was quoted as saying that investigators tracked down the gang "in two hours" to an apartment in the emirate of Ajman and arrested three suspects with the help of local authorities.

"Police reportedly faced resistance from the hackers but they were effectively subdued and arrested," Dubai One reported in its nightly newscast. "Police say this was not their first operation, although it was their first offense here in the UAE. The hackers allegedly made it a business to sell information they managed to extract, moving from one country to another after every cyberattack."

Those arrested are between 24 and 26 years of age and had a list of "5 million bank accounts," as well as hacking software and millions of dollars in assets, al-Khalidi said. The details mirrored those of a July 2015 Ajman raid previously announced by the UAE's Interior Ministry in which three Nigerians were arrested. However, in that raid, officials only said they had "received information from the security authorities in the U.S. state of California," never mentioning any connection to the White House.

The reports Monday did not identify the White House officials targeted. Al-Khalidi reportedly said those suspects would be handed over to the United States for possible criminal trials.

The U.S. Embassy in Abu Dhabi did not respond to requests for comment.

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Associated Press writer Vivian Salama in Washington contributed to this report.

Copyright 2017 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Categories / Criminal, Government, International, Politics

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