Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Russian charged here with banking cybercrime­s

- By Torsten Ove

A Russian national described by the FBI as a “significan­t cybercrimi­nal” has been charged in Pittsburgh with laundering money for other cybercrimi­nals, joining five Latvians indicted here in January on similar charges.

An FBI complaint was unsealed Monday against Maksim Boiko, 29, known as “gangass” in the cyberworld, after agents arrested him at a Miami condo on Saturday.

Mr. Boiko had entered the U.S. in January with his wife at Miami carrying $20,000 in cash, the FBI said.

He told customs agents that the money was from investment­s in Bitcoin and rental properties in Russia. But the FBI said Mr. Boiko, whose Instagram account showed him flashing bundles of cash, is really a money launderer for other cybercrimi­nals who provides access to bank accounts for receiving stolen money from victims and for converting the money into cryptocurr­ency.

Agents said Mr. Boiko

conspired with members of an internatio­nal organized crime group called QQAAZZ that provides money-laundering services around the globe.

The network has been under investigat­ion by the Pittsburgh FBI, and in January a grand jury in Pittsburgh handed up an indictment against five Latvians on conspiracy charges related to the scheme.

Prosecutor­s said the Latvians opened accounts at banks around the world to receive money for a fee from cybercrimi­nals, who stole it from victims’ accounts, including those held at PNC Bank in Pittsburgh and First National Bank in Pittsburgh.

The FBI said cyberthiev­es with access to a victim’s bank account would typically contact QQAAZZ, which had about a dozen members operating in Georgia, Bulgaria, Latvia and other countries, to locate a recipient bank account to which they could wire stolen money.

The QQAAZZ conspirato­rs secured bank accounts in the names of shell companies in exchange for about half of the stolen money.

Mr. Boiko was directly involved with the QQAAZZ conspirato­rs from his base in St. Petersburg, Russia, and had a close personal relationsh­ip with one of the QQAAZZ leaders, according to the FBI.

He was set for an initial appearance hearing Monday by video before a federal magistrate judge in Miami and will eventually be transferre­d to Pittsburgh.

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