(Adjustments headline to say ‘used cellphone knowledge’, not ‘hacked telephones’)
WASHINGTON, June 27 (Reuters) – A hacker working for the Sinaloa drug cartel was in a position to acquire an FBI official’s cellphone information and use Mexico Metropolis’s surveillance cameras to assist monitor and kill the company’s informants in 2018, the U.S. Justice Division mentioned in a report issued on Thursday.
The incident was disclosed in a Justice Division Inspector Common’s audit of the FBI’s efforts to mitigate the consequences of “ubiquitous technical surveillance,” a time period used to explain the worldwide proliferation of cameras and the thriving commerce in huge shops of communications, journey, and placement knowledge.
The report mentioned that the hacker labored for a cartel run by “El Chapo,” a reference to the Sinaloa drug cartel run by Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán, who was extradited to the USA in 2017.
The report mentioned the hacker recognized an FBI assistant authorized attaché on the U.S. Embassy in Mexico Metropolis and was in a position to make use of the attaché’s cellphone quantity “to acquire calls made and obtained, in addition to geolocation knowledge.” The report mentioned the hacker additionally “used Mexico Metropolis’s digicam system to comply with the (FBI official) via town and establish individuals the (official) met with.”
The report mentioned “the cartel used that info to intimidate and, in some situations, kill potential sources or cooperating witnesses.”
The report didn’t establish the alleged hacker, attaché or victims.
The U.S. Embassy in Mexico referred inquiries to the State and Justice departments, who didn’t instantly return messages looking for remark. The FBI and a lawyer for El Chapo didn’t instantly return messages looking for remark.
The gathering of granular location knowledge from individuals’s telephones by all kinds of economic and official actors, mixed with ever-growing protection of surveillance cameras, has posed a thorny drawback for intelligence and regulation enforcement officers, lots of whom depend on confidential informants.
The report mentioned that latest technological advances “have made it simpler than ever for less-sophisticated nations and legal enterprises to establish and exploit vulnerabilities” within the world surveillance economic system. It mentioned the FBI had a strategic plan within the works for mitigating these vulnerabilities and made a number of suggestions, together with extra coaching for bureau personnel. (Reporting by Raphael Satter in Washington. Further reporting by Drazen Jorgic in Mexico Metropolis. Modifying by Rosalba O’Brien)