Tag Archives: Rican

Russian Hacking Cartel Attacks Costa Rican Government Agencies

WASHINGTON — A Russian hacking cartel carried out an extraordinary cyberattack against the government of Costa Rica, crippling tax collection and export systems for more than a month so far and forcing the country to declare a state of emergency.

The ransomware gang Conti, which is based in Russia, claimed credit for the attack, which began on April 12, and has threatened to leak the stolen information unless it is paid $20 million. Experts who track Conti’s movements said the group had recently begun to shift its focus from the United States and Europe to countries in Central and South America, perhaps to retaliate against nations that have supported Ukraine.

Some experts also believe Conti feared a crackdown by the United States and was seeking fresh targets, regardless of politics. The group is responsible for more than 1,000 ransomware attacks worldwide that have led to earnings of more than $150 million, according to estimates from the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

“The ransomware cartels figured out multinationals in the U.S. and Western Europe are less likely to blink if they need to pay some ungodly sum in order to get their business running,” said Juan Andres Guerrero-Saade, a principal threat researcher at SentinelOne. “But at some point, you are going to tap out that space.”

Whatever the reason for the shift, the hack showed that Conti was still acting aggressively despite speculation that the gang might disband after it was the target of a hacking operation in the early days of Russia’s war on Ukraine. The criminal group, which pledged its support to Russia after the invasion, routinely targets businesses and local government agencies by breaking into their systems, encrypting data and demanding a ransom to restore it.

Of the Costa Rica hacking, Brett Callow, a threat analyst at Emsisoft, said that “it’s possibly the most significant ransomware attack to date.”

“This is the first time I can recall a ransomware attack resulting in a national emergency being declared,” he said.

Costa Rica has said it refused to pay the ransom.

The hacking campaign occurred after Costa Rica’s presidential elections and quickly became a political cudgel. The previous administration downplayed the attack in its first official news releases, portraying it as a technical problem and projecting an image of stability and calm. But the newly elected president, Rodrigo Chaves, began his term by declaring a national emergency.

“We are at war,” Mr. Chaves said during a news conference on Monday. He said 27 government institutions had been affected by the ransomware attack, nine of them significantly.

The attack began on April 12, according to Mr. Chaves’s administration, when hackers who said they were affiliated with Conti broke into Costa Rica’s Ministry of Finance, which oversees the country’s tax system. From there, the ransomware spread to other agencies that oversee technology and telecommunications, the government said this month.

Two former officials with the Ministry of Finance, who were not authorized to speak publicly, said the hackers were able to gain access to taxpayers’ information and interrupt Costa Rica’s tax collection process, forcing the agency to shut down some databases and resort to using a nearly 15-year-old system to store revenue from its largest taxpayers. Much of the nation’s tax revenue comes from a relatively small pool of about a thousand major taxpayers, making it possible for Costa Rica to continue tax collection.

The country also relies on exports, and the cyberattack forced customs agents to do their work solely on paper. While the investigation and recovery are underway, taxpayers in Costa Rica are forced to file their tax declarations in person at financial institutions rather than relying on online services.

Mr. Chaves is a former World Bank official and finance minister who has promised to shake up the political system. His government declared a state of emergency this month in response to the cyberattack, calling it “unprecedented in the country.”

“We are facing a situation of unavoidable disaster, of public calamity and internal and abnormal commotion that, without extraordinary measures, cannot be controlled by the government,” Mr. Chaves’s administration said in its emergency declaration.

The state of emergency allows agencies to move more quickly to remedy the breach, the government said. But cybersecurity researchers said that a partial recovery could take months, and that the government may not ever fully recover its data. The government may have backups of some of its taxpayer information, but it would take some time for those backups to come online, and the government would first need to ensure it had removed Conti’s access to its systems, researchers said.

Paying the ransom would not guarantee a recovery because Conti and other ransomware groups have been known to withhold data even after receiving a payment.

“Unless they pay the ransom, which they have stated they have no intention of doing, or have backups that are going to enable them to recover their data, they are potentially looking at total, permanent data loss,” Mr. Callow said.

When Costa Rica refused to pay the ransom, Conti began threatening to leak its data online, posting some files it claimed contained stolen information.

“It is impossible to look at the decisions of the administration of the president of Costa Rica without irony,” the group wrote on its website. “All this could have been avoided by paying.”

On Saturday, Conti raised the stakes, threatening to delete the keys to restore the data if it did not receive payment within a week.

“With governments, intelligence agencies and diplomatic circles, the debilitating part of the attack is really not the ransomware. It’s the data exfiltration,” said Mr. Guerrero-Saade of SentinelOne. “You’re in a position where presumably incredibly sensitive information is in the hands of a third party.”

The breach, among other attacks carried out by Conti, led the U.S. State Department to join with the Costa Rican government to offer a $10 million reward to anyone who provided information that led to the identification of key leaders of the hacking group.

“The group perpetrated a ransomware incident against the government of Costa Rica that severely impacted the country’s foreign trade by disrupting its customs and taxes platforms,” a State Department spokesman, Ned Price, said in a statement. “In offering this reward, the United States demonstrates its commitment to protecting potential ransomware victims around the world from exploitation by cybercriminals.”

Kate Conger reported from Washington, and David Bolaños from San José, Costa Rica.

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Mother of Puerto Rican Olympian Shot, Killed by Stray Bullet from Dispute, Police Say | Bleacher Report

Tom Weller/DeFodi Images via Getty Images

The mother of a two-time Olympian was shot and killed by a stray bullet inside her home in Waterbury, Connecticut, on Saturday, via Dave Collins of the Associated Press.

Waterbury Police Chief Fernando Spagnolo said there was a drug-related dispute outside the home of Mabel Martinez, which led to the open firing of more than 20 gunshots. The 56-year-old was shot in the head as an unintended victim.

One man involved in the dispute was shot in the hip but survived.

Martinez was the mother of Yarimar Mercado Martinez, who represented Puerto Rico in the 2016 and 2020 Summer Olympics in rifle shooting. She finished 28th in the 50-meter rifle competition in Tokyo last summer.

“There are so many things I still needed to learn from you,” she wrote in Spanish in a Facebook post (via CBS News). “I was so far away without being able to do anything, I couldn’t even say goodbye to you.”

The athlete was in Brazil preparing for an international competition, but she flew back to Connecticut on Sunday. 



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DHL cargo plane breaks in half while making emergency landing at Costa Rican airport

A DHL cargo jet broke in half after sliding off the runway as it made an emergency landing at San Jose’s international airport in Costa Rica.

Costa Rica’s Juan Santamaria International Airport was closed after the accident involving the Boeing 757-200 cargo aircraft, which saw a the pilot and co-pilot evacuated unharmed.

DHL, which is owned by Deutsche Post AG, said that “one crew member is undergoing medical checks as a precaution.”

Airport operator Aeris said that the crash impacted 57 commercial and cargo flights to and from the United States, Central America, Mexico, Canada and Europe, and 8,500 passengers.

The aircraft, which was heading to Guatemala, suffered a failure of its hydraulic system, causing the pilot to request an emergency landing back at the airport on the outskirts of San Jose shortly after take-off, according to Reuters.

Héctor Chaves, director of he Costa Rica Fire Department, said that after landing the aircraft skidded, turned 180 degrees and cracked in two.

“Units mobilised to remove the pilot and co-pilot,” Mr Chaves said. “Then they applied foam to prevent a spill and now they are working on an earthen dike to avoid any fuel from reaching the drainage system.”

(REUTERS)

DHL said that it was working with airport officials to have the stricken plane removed from the runway to help normal operations resume.

“DHL’s incident response team has been activated and an investigation will be conducted with the relevant authorities to determine what happened,” the company said.

The plane was being operated by the company’s subsidiary Aero Expreso.

Aeris said the airport reopened at 3:30 p.m. local time, several hours earlier than expected.

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British man’s genitals attacked by flesh eating bug after Costa Rican surgery

British businessman, 47, is trapped in Costa Rica after suffering gangrene of the genitals following a horror reaction to routine surgery – as his family battle to bring him home for treatment

  •  Colin Graw, 47, underwent a minor surgical procedure in Costa Rica in January
  • Four days later Mr Graw’s genitals were being attacked by a flesh eating bug
  • He spent nine weeks in hospital fighting for his life amassing a bill of £80,0000
  • His family in Lancashire have launched a GoFundMe to help him return home 

A British businessman who underwent a minor surgical procedure in Costa Rica in January spent nine weeks fighting for his life after a flesh eating bug infected his genitals. 

Colin Graw, 47, was discharged after the surgery but within four days he was in tremendous pain as the deadly necrotising fasciitis bacteria attacked his genitals. 

Surgeons were forced to remove large sections of the affected area as the dead tissue spread rapidly. 

British businessman Colin Graw, 47, suffered a life-threatening infection when his genitals were attacked by an incredibly rare flesh eating bug following a minor surgical procedure in Costa Rica

Mr Graw, pictured while in hospital in Costa Rica, spent nine weeks fighting for his life after 

Medics struggled to identify the correct antibiotic to tackle the infection, leaving him in a critical condition. 

Following his marathon hospital stay, he is still being given a spectrum of antibiotics to kill off the infection. 

Despite being treated in a Costa Rican public hospital, Mr Graw has been left with a bill for £80,000 for his treatment to date although this is expected to rise to £150,000. 

Mr Graw’s sister, Tanja Willis, 49, from Parbold, Lancashire, said her brother went to Costa Rica to follow up a business opportunity. 

According to Ms Willis, doctors diagnosed Fournier’s Gangrene and were forced to remove layers of infected skin until they found healthy tissue. 

Ms Willis said: ‘It’s been absolutely horrific for him, he is in exceptional amounts of pain, he can’t sit properly- he only had a 30 per cent chance of survival because it’s such a rare bacterial infection and there aren’t many antibiotics that can treat these types of infections.’ 

She said it was ‘awful’ being so far away from her brother when he was suffering a ‘near death experience’. 

Despite being discharged from hospital, Mr Graw has to attend hospital three times a week to keep various infections from spreading.  

Ms Willis said: ‘They’re still trying to fight off infections that are highly resistant to antibiotics. He is too ill to travel so we’re not in a position to get him home.’ 

Mr Graw’s sister Tanja Willis, 49, has launched a GoFundMe to raise funds for the businessman who has medical bills of more than £80,000. He is facing a further £70,000 in debts before his treatment is complete

Doctors have told Mr Graw that he has beaten the flesh eating bug, but without further treatment he will not be able to return home to the UK. 

Ms Willis said: ‘I think he was exceptionally unlucky to contract bacteria like that. He was on the beach one day, and three days later he was in hospital fighting for his life, it happened so quickly. It was just supposed to be a day procedure – he just got an infection and it literally escalated from something minor to him being lying on his death bed.’

Ms Willis said she has launched a GoFundMe to help her brother cope with his bills. 

She added: ‘I want him to be able to focus on his recovery and not have to worry about finances and how he’s actually going to recover from the financial impact of this. 

‘I spoke to him yesterday and he said to me over the phone, he is absolutely shell shocked and overwhelmed by all the messages of support he has received from all over the world.

‘We can’t help him physically but what we can do is lighten the financial burden for him and I am so grateful to all of the donations we have received from people all over.’

WHAT IS FOURNIER’S GANGRENE? 

Fournier’s gangrene is a life threatening infection that causes skin and tissues on the genitals to rot. 

It was originally reported by Baurienne in 1764 and by Fournier in 1883 as a rapidly progressing gangrene of the perineum area in both men and women.

It typically presents in patients who are immunocompromised and overweight, in particular diabetics.

Pain and fevers are the main symptoms.

Prompt diagnosis and immediate treatment is critical due to how quickly the infection can progress. 

Gangrene commonly affects the extremities – like fingers, toes, arms and legs.

It refers to the decay and death of tissue resulting from an interruption of blood flow to a certain area of your body.

Gangrene can occur in the muscles and internal organs. 

Treatments for gangrene include surgery to remove dead tissue, antibiotics and other approaches.

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