Muhammad Fahd allegedly paid AT&T employees hundreds of thousands of dollars to unlock two million phones over five years, costing the company millions, according to the Department of Justice.
Employees Bribed to Unlock Phones
Fahd, 34, from Pakistan, allegedly paid multiple employees hundreds of thousands of dollars to unlock phones from AT&T, according to the DOJ’s statement. This caused the phones to leave AT&T service and the payment plan, which resulted in AT&T losing millions of dollars.
Fahd is accused of paying one employee up to $428,500 over five years. The indictment says this scheme went on between 2012 and 2017. After Fahd recruited a couple of employees, he paid them to convince others to join.
He originally would give the employees international mobile equipment identity (IMEI) numbers for cell phones and then the employees would unlock the phones, the DOJ says. The scheme didn’t stop there.
After some of the employees got fired, the remaining ones aided Fahd in creating malware that would allow Fahd to unlock the phones himself from a remote location. The employees were also paid to install hardware, routers and WiFi access points that gave Fahd more access to protected computers, Forbes reported.
“AT&T noticed large numbers of phones being unlocked by a small number of employees — they reported it to law enforcement,” Emily Langlie, Communications Director for the U.S. Attorney’s Office, told the Daily Caller.
“Three employees have admitted to taking part in the plan and that they were paid thousands of dollars by Fahd. They will be sentenced in November,” Langlie said.
“[T]hey face sentences for conspiracy, false statement and money laundering offenses — some carry a maximum penalty of 5 years for other charges the max is 20 years,” according to Langlie.
Fahd was extradited to the United States on August 2 after being arrested in Hong Kong, at the request of the United States, on February 4, 2018.
The DOJ says Fahd was charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud, conspiracy to violate the Travel Act and the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, four counts of wire fraud, two counts of accessing a protected computer in furtherance of fraud, two counts of intentional damage to a protected computer and four counts of violating the Travel Act.
Republished by permission. Original here.
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The Daily Caller, Khareem Sudlow