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US Offers $10 Million Bounty in Hunt for DarkSide Ransomware Operators

US Goverment Offers $10 Million Reward for Data on Leaders and Members of DarkSide Ransomware Operation

<p style="text-align: center;"><strong><span><span>US Goverment Offers $10 Million Reward for Data on Leaders and Members of DarkSide Ransomware Operation</span></span></strong></p>

US Goverment Offers $10 Million Reward for Data on Leaders and Members of DarkSide Ransomware Operation

The U.S. government wants to find the people responsible for the Colonial Pipeline ransomware attack and it’s putting up multi-million rewards for data on the operators behind the DarkSide extortion campaign.

The Department of State on Thursday offered up to $10 million for information leading to the identification or location of senior members of the DarkSide gang that caused major gas disruptions earlier this year.

In addition, the U.S. State Department is offering a reward of up to $5 million for information leading to the arrest and/or conviction in any country “of any individual conspiring to participate in or attempting to participate in a DarkSide variant ransomware incident.”

In a statement, the State Department said the DarkSide ransomware group was responsible for the Colonial Pipeline Company ransomware incident in May 2021, which led to the company’s decision to proactively and temporarily shut down the 5,500-mile pipeline that carries 45 percent of the fuel used on the East Coast of the United States. 

“In offering this reward, the United States demonstrates its commitment to protecting ransomware victims around the world from exploitation by cyber criminals,” it added. “The United States looks to nations who harbor ransomware criminals that are willing to bring justice for those victim businesses and organizations affected by ransomware.”

[ READ: REvil Ransomware Gang Hit by Law Enforcement Hack-Back ]

The rewards are being offered under the Department of State’s Transnational Organized Crime Rewards Program (TOCRP).

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The latest reward offer follows a recent law enforcement operation against the REvil ransomware gang and signals an aggressive new approach to fighting back against the ransomware epidemic.

In that operation, the Tor servers associated with the REvil ransomware gang were seized in what was described as a “multi-country” hack-back operation that remains active.

The ransomware group’s public blog, which was used to name-and-shame organizations into paying multi-million data recovery ransoms, was knocked offline. A goodbye message from one of the operators read: “The server was compromised, and they were looking for me. Good luck, everyone; I’m off,” 

Threat hunters tracking underground human-operated ransomware operations confirmed the REvil shutdown, which was carried out by foreign partner of the U.S. government.

Several other competing ransomware groups responded to the REvil network takeover by moving cryptocurrency reserves and even publicly complaining about the hack-back operation.

[ READ: Colonial Pipeline CEO Explains $4.4M Ransomware Payment ]

The infamous REvil gang was caught using the Darkside data encryption tool in human-operated ransomware attacks against multiple U.S. companies. These included the Colonial Pipeline cyberattack that forced a shutdown of gas stations and the Kaseya supply-chain compromise.

The U.S. government recently identified approximately $5.2 billion in outgoing Bitcoin transactions that are potentially linked to ransomware payments, mostly to cybercriminal gangs in Russia and Eastern Europe.

Related: REvil Ransomware Gang Hit by Law Enforcement Hack-Back

Related: Black Hat 2021: New CISA Boss Unveils Anti-Ransomware Collab

Related: DarkSide Ransomware Shutdown: An Exit Scam or Running for Hills

Related: Colonial Pipeline CEO Explains $4.4M Ransomware Payment

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