Security Affairs
Adobe ColdFusion flaw CVE-2026-48282 now exploited in the wild|Hidden Web Prompts Trick AI Agents Into Sending Money|Seven Bugs in FatFs Put IoT and Embedded Devices at Risk|Bad Epoll Flaw Gives Attackers Root Access on Linux and Android|Medtronic Notifies 3.8 Million After ShinyHunters Data Breach|SECURITY AFFAIRS MALWARE NEWSLETTER ROUND 104|Security Affairs newsletter Round 584 by Pierluigi Paganini – INTERNATIONAL EDITION|U.S. Government Agency Paid $1M to Data Extortion Group Kairos|FBI: TeamPCP Compromised Dev Tools to Steal Cloud Credentials|Pegasus Used Against MEP Investigating Pegasus, Citizen Lab Finds|JADEPUFFER: First End-to-End AI-Driven Ransomware Operation|The Anatomy of a Shadow AI Supply-Chain Breach: Lessons from the 2026 Vercel Incident|Adobe ColdFusion flaw CVE-2026-48282 now exploited in the wild|Hidden Web Prompts Trick AI Agents Into Sending Money|Seven Bugs in FatFs Put IoT and Embedded Devices at Risk|Bad Epoll Flaw Gives Attackers Root Access on Linux and Android|Medtronic Notifies 3.8 Million After ShinyHunters Data Breach|SECURITY AFFAIRS MALWARE NEWSLETTER ROUND 104|Security Affairs newsletter Round 584 by Pierluigi Paganini – INTERNATIONAL EDITION|U.S. Government Agency Paid $1M to Data Extortion Group Kairos|FBI: TeamPCP Compromised Dev Tools to Steal Cloud Credentials|Pegasus Used Against MEP Investigating Pegasus, Citizen Lab Finds|JADEPUFFER: First End-to-End AI-Driven Ransomware Operation|The Anatomy of a Shadow AI Supply-Chain Breach: Lessons from the 2026 Vercel Incident|
Advertisement

Ad Placeholder

Full Width × 90

Breaking News

Texas man sentenced to 145 months in federal prison for hacking Los Angeles Superior Court

A Texas man found guilty of hacking the Los Angeles Superior Court (LASC) computer system and used it to send out phishing emails. A Texas man, Oriyomi Sadiq Aloba (33), was found guilty of hacking the Los Angeles Superior Court (LASC) computer system and abusing it to send out roughly 2 million phishing messages. The […]

Scattered Spider DOJ

A Texas man found guilty of hacking the Los Angeles Superior Court (LASC) computer system and used it to send out phishing emails.

A Texas man, Oriyomi Sadiq Aloba (33), was found guilty of hacking the Los Angeles Superior Court (LASC) computer system and abusing it to send out roughly 2 million phishing messages. The phishing campaign aimed at obtaining the victims’ credit card numbers.

The man was sentenced by United States District Judge R. Gary Klausner to 145 months in federal jails, the judge also ordered him to pay $47,479 in restitution.

“A Texas man who was found guilty of hacking into the Los Angeles Superior Court (LASC) computer system, using the system to send approximately 2 million malicious phishing emails, and fraudulently obtaining hundreds of credit card numbers was sentenced this afternoon to 145 months in federal prison.” reads the press release published by the DoJ.

In July 2017, Aloba and his co-conspirators compromised the email account of a court employee and used it to send the phishing emails to coworkers. The malicious messages included links to a phishing website set up to request LASC users their email addresses and passwords.

“Thousands of court employees received the Dropbox email, and hundreds disclosed their email credentials to the attacker. The compromised email accounts then were used to send the roughly 2 million phishing emails.” continues the DoJ.

Aloba and his co-conspirators also sent phishing messages pretending to come from American Express, Wells Fargo and other companies. In this case, the links included in the phishing emails were pointing to web pages requesting the victims’ banking credentials, personal details, and credit card information.

The information provided by the victims through the fake American Express website was sent to an email account under the control of the Texan man.

Investigators executed a search warrant at Aloba’s residence and seized a thumb drive that was hidden in a toilet, a damaged iPhone in a bathroom sink, and a laptop with a smashed screen.

In July, Aloba was found guilty of one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, 15 counts of wire fraud, one count of attempted wire fraud, one count of unauthorized impairment of a protected computer, five counts of unauthorized access to a protected computer to obtain information, and four counts of aggravated identity theft.

The co-defendant Robert Charles Nicholson (28), from New York, pleaded guilty in June to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud. The man will be sentenced on November 4.

The DoJ also added that three other defendants allegedly hired by Aloba to create the “phishing kits” remain at large outside the United States.

[adrotate banner=”9″] [adrotate banner=”12″]

Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – Los Angeles Superior Court, hacking)

[adrotate banner=”5″]

[adrotate banner=”13″]