Data Breaches

Iranian Man Pleads Guilty to Role in Baltimore Ransomware Attack

Sina Gholinejad pleaded guilty to computer-fraud and wire-fraud-conspiracy charges linked to the Robbinhood ransomware hit on Baltimore.

An Iranian national has admitted in US federal court that he helped run the Robbinhood ransomware crew behind a series of extortion attacks that crippled city halls, hospitals and private companies across the country. 

The Justice Department said Sina Gholinejad pleaded guilty on Tuesday to computer-fraud and wire-fraud-conspiracy charges, acknowledging that he and unnamed partners broke into dozens of networks, locked up data with the Robbinhood malware and demanded Bitcoin ransoms. 

Gholinejad faces as much as 30 years in prison when he is sentenced in August.

Robbinhood’s best-known hit was the May 2019 attack on Baltimore that forced the city to disconnect hundreds of PCs and knocked out online payment portals for water bills, property taxes and parking tickets. 

The city of Baltimore ultimately spent more than $19 million on recovery and lost revenue; additional Robbinhood ransomware victims were also reported in North Carolina, Oregon, New York and New Jersey. 

Prosecutors say the Robbinhood gang worked like a modern ransomware-as-a-service shop with operations dating back to early 2019. Ransom notes left behind at infected organizations steered victims to Tor-hosted negotiation sites and demanded payment in Bitcoin. 

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

Once a ransom is paid, the Justice Department said the gang “chain-hopped” the coins through mixers and other cryptocurrencies to hide their tracks, masking logins behind layers of VPNs. 

“Cybercrime is not a victimless offense. It is a direct attack on our communities,” said US Attorney Daniel Bubar. “Gholinejad and his co-conspirators orchestrated a ransomware scheme that disrupted lives, businesses, and local governments, and resulted in losses of tens of millions of dollars from unsuspecting victims and institutions.”

Related: The Growing Threat of Targeted Ransomware

Related: Russian Ransomware Gang Exploited Windows Zero-Day Before Patch

Related: Chinese APT Tools Found in Ransomware Schemes, Blurring Attribution Lines

Related: US Gov Disrupts BlackCat Ransomware Operation

Related: Baltimore to Buy $20M in Cyber Insurance Months After Attack

Related Content

Malware & Threats

The attackers deployed a new Go-based backdoor that uses Microsoft Teams servers for command-and-control.

ICS/OT

California Water Service says there is no indication of operational disruptions to its water and wastewater systems. 

Ransomware

Mackay Sugar was targeted in a cyberattack carried out by a threat group known as The Gentlemen.

Cybercrime

Oleksii Oleksiyovych Lytvynenko admitted to working on the development of a loader for the Conti gang.

ICS/OT

The hackers published 5GB of data, including customer personal information and credentials for the RTKBase platform.

Ransomware

The authentication bypass vulnerability allows attackers to establish VPN connections without a valid password.

Ransomware

Focusing on hacking law firms in the US, the ransomware group relies on fast flux to hide its C&C infrastructure.

Nation-State

The attack was claimed by a hacktivist group, but evidence showed it used infrastructure linked to Iranian government threat actors.

Copyright © 2026 SecurityWeek ®, a Wired Business Media Publication. All Rights Reserved.

Exit mobile version