Sunday, October 27, 2013

"To Move Drugs, Traffickers Are Hacking Shipping Containers"

"The scheme sounds like a work of near science fiction. But police in the Netherlands and Belgium insist its true, and say they have the evidence to prove it: two tons of cocaine and heroin, a machine gun, a suitcase stuffed with $1.7 million, and hard drive cases turned into hacking devices."

The plot, which began in 2011, reportedly involved a mix of international drug gangs and digital henchmen: drug traffickers recruited hackers to penetrate computers that tracked and controlled the movement and location of shipping containers arriving at Antwerp's port. The simple software and hardware hacks—using USB keyloggers and more sophisticated purpose-built devices—allowed traffickers to send in drivers and gunmen to steal particular containers before the legitimate owner arrived."

The scheme was first noticed last year, when workers at a container terminal in Antwerp began to wonder why entire containers—said to contain cargo like bananas and timber—were disappearing from the port."

"I'm really not surprised at these practices," said Jim Giermanski, a former FBI agent and chairman of Powers International, a transportation security technology company. "The reality is that most shippers don't have a clue as to what to do to secure a container" from tampering by smugglers and terrorists, who, Giermanski warns, could use them to conceal dirty bombs.

Portions of an Article by Alex Pasternack as it appeared on Motherboard

7 comments:

chickelit said...

Season 2 of "The Wire" told how heroin is smuggled into the port of Baltimore in shipping containers. I don't think they were making much up.

Eric the Fruit Bat said...

The quote goes from astonishment to matter-of-fact in the span of three paragraphs.

Journalism by robots is no longer a scheme that sounds like a work of near science fiction.

So there you have it.

Paddy O said...

Are they available to help set up a health care website?

Mumpsimus said...

William Gibson should be getting royalties from these guys.

ricpic said...

Dirty bombs, huh? TSA prefers securing grandmas to securing shipping containers. One more reason we're doomed.

virgil xenophon said...

Newsflash: Shipping containers are not secured ON PURPOSE to allow for border customs inspections. The ONLY thing affixed to container doors is the stamped & dated narrow metal customs inspection band threaded between the door handles.

ndspinelli said...

chick, Exactly..The Greek was the mastermind, a great season of The Wire.