mikkupikku 13 hours ago

Imagine having these sort of warrants hanging over your head and just casually deciding to do a little international traveling. Guys like this are constantly getting nabbed this way. I wonder if being a wanted man for so long has some sort of psychological effect that makes people take more risks to get it over with.

  • irjustin 12 hours ago

    I imagine the general assumption is that you don't realize that you've been ID'ed. That they traveled before and nothing happened so traveling again isn't a big deal because all the "tricks" they used to cover their tracks worked.

    • Gibbon1 5 hours ago

      Friend of mine has a story from 50 years ago. Guy he knew was dealing coke. Got spooked and stopped selling. Three years later he thought it'd all blown over. Set up a another deal and got popped.

      Another friend that worked IT at a slaughter house said one of the bikers that worked their said, the feds aren't good at figuring you out. But when they do they never stop watching you.

      • matwood 4 hours ago

        There’s knowing something and building a case to prove it in court. With drugs in particular the police tend want the higher up people so will watch the others for a long time.

  • manquer 9 hours ago

    I would imagine that is lot more likely that is just only the official story rather than what actually happens behind the scenes in these situations.

    In the background there could be deals with the countries protecting them or with the target directly or a existing deal they had is off now. It may even be unrelated, wasn't worth expending the diplomatic capital before, but they are a connection to someone else more important and so on.

    It could also be the targets were captured in a illegal way, no country wants to be diplomatically humiliated and the prosecuting one wouldn't want to disclose their covert ops capabilities.

    Announced News is more often only a Press Release, we shouldn't be taking them literally.

    • _zoltan_ 4 hours ago

      if you read the article it links to an Italian supreme court summary that apparently states he has lost his appeal to not get extradited, so after that it shouldn't have been a surprise that... he was extradited.

    • ribosometronome 6 hours ago

      >captured in a illegal way

      Tracked down in an illegal way? Sure, quite possibly. But he's going to get a trial. If he were kidnapped out of Italy by the CIA or something, it seems like it would be hard to keep that from coming out.

      • aswegs8 3 hours ago

        Why should the CIA need to kidnap someone from Italy if they can just provide info about the person to the Italian govt so he gets arrested and extradited?

        • Cthulhu_ 2 hours ago

          If the CIA is involved it wouldn't be any regular criminal, but e.g. an international spy, someone who may even be protected by Italy for ??? reasons.

  • reisse 11 hours ago

    From the other point of view, the abundance of stories when the high-profile criminal was catched doing something stupid, and the relative absence of ones when the criminal was catched in some clever way may mean the law enforcement is doing their job poorly.

    • Polizeiposaune 11 hours ago

      Operation Flagship in 1985 was one of the clever ones -- US marshalls nabbed 101 wanted fugitives on a single day at a stadium, where they were expecting to receive two free tickets to an NFL game...

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Flagship

      • ghostpepper 8 hours ago

        This must have been the inspiration for the Simpsons bit where the police set up a sting by offering a free boat giveaway

        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YJKHw_CNYP4

        • technothrasher 25 minutes ago

          I recall an old episode of "COPS" from years ago where they showed an ongoing sting they had where they called people with warrants and told them they'd won a big screen TV and to come down to the warehouse to get it.

      • letmetweakit 2 hours ago

        How do you invite the fugitives to such an event? If you know how to reach them you can probably arrest them no?

        • 4gotunameagain an hour ago

          The article mentions:

            ..mail invitations to the last known addresses of approximately 3,000 wanted persons.   
          
          It is presumably much more efficient and effective use of resources to try and gather them in the same place, than individually surveilling 3,000 houses.
      • BolexNOLA 10 hours ago

        > At least half of the 3,309 fugitives arrested in FIST VII were later released on bail

        Lmfao god bless America right?

        That reminds me of one of my favorite lines in one of my favorite movies, Thank You for Smoking. seriously if you are reading this and have not watched it, stop what you’re doing and go watch it right now.

        Nick Naylor’s (a tobacco lobbyist) son asks, “dad, why is America the greatest country in the world?” Nick is reading something, doesn’t look up and takes a slight beat to think about it, then just calmly responds, “our endless appeal system.”

        That movie is unbelievable. I know out of context that line just seems like edge lord nonsense, but Aaron Eckhardt (sp?) just sells it so hard.

        • toyg an hour ago

          > our endless appeal system

          Mr Naylor's clearly never got involved with Italian justice, where the average criminal trial takes 4 and a half years as it goes through 3 judgement levels (the first sentence alone is likely to take more than a year). By law, a "reasonable" process is expected to take up to 6 years.

          As far as I can see, most criminal cases in the US are completed in less than a year.

        • cwillu 7 hours ago

          I'm curious what you think “released on bail” means?

          • Aurornis 6 hours ago

            What’s confusing about it?

            Bail is typically only granted to those who are not deemed substantial flight risks. Capturing fugitives and then turning around and releasing them on bail is ironic.

          • jojobas 6 hours ago

            Released to the general population with monitoring measures often inadequate to prevent disappearance or guarantee court appearances.

    • cbsmith 4 hours ago

      s/catched/caught/g

  • tobyjsullivan 12 hours ago

    Hypothetically, how would someone know there was a warrant out for their arrest in another country? That doesn’t seem like public information.

    I figure most cyber criminals assume they are untraceable until they get arrested.

    • monerozcash 4 hours ago

      In this particular case the person arrested had been very publicly indicted years ago and was most certainly aware.

    • mito88 12 hours ago

      interpol

      • cwillu 7 hours ago

        Is “interpol” public information?

        • monerozcash 4 hours ago

          There are many sellers on .ru language darknet forums offering Interpol and Schengen information system lookups. In many countries every single police officer has access to this, it's not very hard to corrupt one person when the only requirement is that they be any police officer.

        • int0x29 7 hours ago

          If you have friends in the FSB, yes.

  • chc4 13 hours ago

    The human brain is just really bad at evaluating risk, especially over long periods of time. A lot of people are wanted overseas for years or even decades without anything happening, which makes it hard to maintain the mindset of being at risk without falling back to "eh, I've been fine this long"; a lot of them do foreign travel anyway and get away with it, which makes it hard to not fall into "what's one more vacation to a extradition-friendly country".

  • dbancajas 9 hours ago

    How can you ID these guys if they get a new passport. Changed hairstyle and do some surgery to the face?

    • normie3000 9 hours ago

      Their name and date of birth?

      • Cthulhu_ 2 hours ago

        With enough contacts and corrupt government officials those can be changed.

        Of course, there's also biometrics - since 9/11 especially the US takes your photo and fingerprint when you try to enter the country. Only a matter of time before DNA is added (honestly surprised it's not a thing yet).

  • pnw 13 hours ago

    When you're living in the Russian-occupied part of Ukraine (Donetsk), I can see why you might run that risk.

    • anonym29 13 hours ago

      This was a Ukranian national, not a Russian.

      • dragonwriter 13 hours ago

        Yes and the sealed indictment from 2012 was unsealed in 2014, the same year as the Russian invasion of Crimea and Eastern Ukraine, which was also the direct trigger for Ukraine switching from a non-aligned position to seeking very close cooperation from the US.

        I can very easily see how home in both the narrow regional and broad national sense could have become quite risky for a number of reasons for him from 2014 on.

      • hunterpayne 6 hours ago

        152mm artillery shells don't care what your passport says.

  • lofaszvanitt 6 hours ago

    Just look at the profile pics of these people and you'll get the answer. They like to show bling, have a perceived invulnerability shield around them, and like to spend the ill gotten gains.

  • anonym29 13 hours ago

    Italian and Greek airports: the bane of otherwise untouchable slavic cybercriminals since 1994

  • johnQdeveloper 11 hours ago

    > Sources close to the investigation say Yuriy Igorevich Rybtsov, a 41-year-old from the Russia-controlled city of Donetsk, Ukraine

    I don't think it was casual traveling but getting out of a wartorn country.

nine_k 14 hours ago

«The Jabber Zeus name is derived from the malware they used — a custom version of the ZeuS banking trojan — that stole banking login credentials and would send the group a Jabber instant message each time a new victim entered a one-time passcode at a financial institution website. The gang targeted mostly small to mid-sized businesses, and they were an early pioneer of so-called “man-in-the-browser” attacks, malware that can silently intercept any data that victims submit in a web-based form.»

Plankaluel 2 hours ago

It's shocking how much pictures influence judgment: Without reading much, at first, I thought: Poor guy, maybe he got pulled into something, ...

Then I saw the pictures of him in a leopard fur pajama and indoor sunglasses, and with his (an assumption on my side) trophy wife, and thought: "Naah, he probably deserves it"

  • Thorrez 2 hours ago

    Those 2 pictures were of a different hacker, not of MrICQ.

    • Plankaluel an hour ago

      See, that's why you should read the article, I guess :D So the influence is even worse than I thought ...

morkalork 12 hours ago

The included photos are glorious

  • WD-42 10 hours ago

    This is how I want to picture Russian hackers and they didn’t disappoint.

    • nullorempty 3 hours ago

      Ukranian, technically.

      • kreyenborgi 3 hours ago

        Some ukr, some rus

        > the author of the original Zeus Trojan — Evgeniy Mikhailovich Bogachev, a Russian man who has long been on the FBI’s “Most Wanted” list.

  • k33n 9 hours ago

    Straight out of the 2001 film Swordfish

gethly 4 hours ago

> arrested in Italy and is now in custody in the United States

unpopular opinion, but what is the point of having borders, countries and legal systems if they are all connected into one global unit giving merely an illusion of separation to groups of people?

  • dragonwriter 3 hours ago

    > unpopular opinion, but what is the point of having borders, countries and legal systems if they are all connected into one global unit giving merely an illusion of separation to groups of people?

    You didn't state an opinion (unpopular or otherwise), you asked a question.

    But the question is very much like asking why have defined property rights, property lines, fences, etc., when people still engage in voluntary trade and other interactions.