DOJ: Indiana utility among companies targeted by Iranian hackers

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Justice Department said Wednesday that three Iranian citizens have been charged in the United States with cyberattacks that targeted power companies, local governments and small businesses and nonprofits, including a domestic violence shelter.

The charges accuse the hacking suspects of targeting hundreds of victims in the U.S. and other countries. Prosecutors said the hackers encrypted and stole data from victims’ networks and threatened to release it unless exorbitant ransom payments were made. In some cases, the victims made those payments, the department said.

One of the victims of the Iranian hackers was “a regional electric utility company based in Indiana,” according to the Justice Department.

The attack on the utility company happened Oct. 25 of last year. Ahmad Khatabi Aghda is accused of tying to hack the utility company.

The indictment does not indicate that the attackers were successful or demanded payment in Bitcoin, as it does in several other cyberattacks listed in the indictment.

The hackers are not believed to have been working on behalf of the Iranian government but instead for their own financial gain, and some of the victims were even in Iran, according to a senior Justice Department official who briefed reporters on the case on the condition of anonymity under ground rules set by the department. But the official said the activity exists because hackers are permitted by the Iranian government to largely operate with impunity.

The three accused hackers are thought to be in Iran and have not been arrested, but the Justice Department official said the charges make it “functionally impossible” for them to leave the country.

The case was filed in federal court in New Jersey, where a municipality in Union County was hacked last year.

One of the victims was a domestic violence shelter in Pennsylvania, which the indictment says was extorted out of $13,000 to recover its hacked data.