Colombian cyber-crook jailed for nine years

Man guilty of $1.4m fraud

Written by Clement James

A Colombian citizen has been sentenced to nine years in prison for a complex computer fraud which affected more than 600 people.

Mario Simbaqueba Bonilla, 40, was also sentenced to three years supervised release on his exit from prison, and ordered to pay restitution of $347,000.

Simbaqueba Bonilla pleaded guilty in January to charges of conspiracy, access device fraud and aggravated identity theft.

According to the charges Simbaqueba Bonilla, alone and in concert with a co-conspirator, engaged in a complex series of computer intrusions, identity thefts and credit card frauds designed to steal money from payroll, bank and other accounts.

The court recognised the attempted and actual loss from the scheme at $1.4m.

Much of the identity theft, initiated from computers in Colombia, targeted individuals residing in the US, including Department of Defense personnel.

Simbaqueba Bonilla used the money to buy expensive electronics and luxury travel and accommodation in various countries, including Hong Kong, Turks and Caicos, France, Jamaica, Italy, Chile and the US.

The man engaged in a conspiracy between 2004 to 2007 that began with illegally installing keystroke logging software on computers located in hotel business centres and internet lounges around the world.

This software collected the personal information of those who used the computers, including passwords and other identifying information used to access bank, payroll, brokerage and other accounts online.

Simbaqueba Bonilla used the data to steal or divert money into accounts he had created in the names of other people he had victimised in the same way.

Through a complex series of electronic transactions designed to cover his trail, Simbaqueba Bonilla transferred the stolen money to credit, cash or debit cards and had the cards mailed to himself and others at commercial mailing addresses.

Federal agents arrested Simbaqueba Bonilla when he flew into the US in August 2007.

At the time of his arrest, Simbaqueba Bonilla was flying on an airline ticket purchased with stolen funds, and had in his possession a laptop also purchased with stolen funds.

The laptop contained the names, passwords and other personal and financial information of more than 600 people.

Further reading

US surfers 'alarmingly' ignorant over botnet danger

NCSA warns over danger posed by cyber criminals' weapon of choice   More...

Teenager admits to million-PC botnet scam

18 year-old unlikely to get jail senence   More...

EU outlines plans to tackle cyber-war

We shall fight them on the servers, we shall fight them in the browser, we shall never reboot   More...

Emergency services hack lands man in prison

19 year-old gets three years for 911 prank   More...

Related articles

US cracks multimillion-dollar piracy ring

Two brothers sent down in major sting   More...

US man admits P2P child porn charges

David Leroy Knellinger jailed for seven years   More...

DrinkOrDie head goes down for 51 months

Courts throw the book at Hew Raymond Griffiths   More...

Seattle man arrested for P2P data theft

Gregory Kopiloff accused of using Limewire and Soulseek to search users' hard drives   More...

Do you agree?

Advertisement

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Advertisement

Watch

16 May 2008

2.97 MBXP on OLPC, broken dreams and Yahoo fights back More...

15 May 2008

3.28 MBDark fibre, mobile TV and solar power More...

14 May 2008

2.66 MBOnline inequality, mobile thumbprints and corporate raids More...

Poll

HOME WORKING

HOME WORKING

Do you let any or all of your employees work from home?

Previous poll results

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Spotlight

OLPC

OLPC to ship with Windows XP

Microsoft teams up with One Laptop per Child project   More...

The Sims

The Sims goes flat-pack with Ikea

Virtual world gets Swedish wood   More...

Advertisement

Microsoft-Yahoo

Yahoo board fights back at Icahn

Investor accused of 'significant misunderstanding' in Microsoft saga   More...

MySpace

Woman charged over MySpace suicide

Lori Drew indicted on federal charges   More...

Advertisement