Hacker sentenced to prison after Jobcentre experiences cyber attacks

22 July 2024 , 20:54
395     0
Hacker sentenced to prison after Jobcentre experiences cyber attacks
Hacker sentenced to prison after Jobcentre experiences cyber attacks

A university student who created malware targeting government websites while living with his parents has been jailed for 21 months.

Amar Tagore, 21, made almost £45,000 from offering buyers malicious software to disrupt corporate and state-run websites.

Police were alerted after a Jobcentre site in Braintree, Essex, suffered regular cyber attacks between May and August 2022.

Tagore, from West Dunbartonshire, Scotland, later pleaded guilty to a computer misuse offence and breaching proceeds of crime legislation. 

Hundreds of online customers used Tagore’s malware to carry out distributed denial of services (DDoS) attacks - which took websites offline by overwhelming them with internet traffic.

Police Scotland Custody image of Amar Tagore eiqrtiqtdiddxinv

Tagore pleaded guilty to a computer misuse offence and breaching proceeds of crime legislation
 

The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) raised the alarm after the Braintree Jobcentre was targeted for three months.

Police subsequently identified Tagore as the owner of a mobile phone found to run a programme called Myra, which was running two different attack "commands" towards DWP’s computer system.

The Myra home page and its IP address were then traced to Tagore, the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service (COPFS) said.

The website provided different packages, including a VIP+ offering that was "specialised with your attack suite to meet any desires".

A financial investigation found that between January 2020 and November 2022, the third-year cybersecurity student earned £44,433 from the sales of his malicious software.

PA Media Dumbarton Sheriff Court

Tagore was jailed during a sentencing hearing at Dumbarton Sheriff Court
 

Sineidin Corrins, of the COPFS, said Tagore’s product "had the potential to cause serious disruption" to websites all over the world.

“He made tens of thousands of pounds through the sale of his malicious software and technical expertise," she said.

“But he is now paying the price for his criminal conduct."

During his sentencing at Dumbarton Sheriff Court, Tagore was told he would be subject to confiscation action under proceeds of crime legislation.

Sophia Martinez

Cyber attacks, Crime, Hacking, Students, Computers, Scotland

Read more similar news:

01.02.2023, 06:49 • Crime
Man in 30s dies after being stabbed in park sparking police probe
01.02.2023, 10:09 • Crime
Russian model killed after calling Putin a 'psychopath' was strangled by her ex
01.02.2023, 12:25 • Crime
'UK's most neglected street with post-apocalyptic scenes like The Last of Us'
01.02.2023, 12:27 • Investigation
Chilling warning text sent by ex boyfriend minutes before murdering former lover
01.02.2023, 15:05 • Crime
Brit has fingertip bitten off by Russian woman in beach beanbag argument
01.02.2023, 16:04 • Crime
Adam Azim makes emotional plea against rising knife crime as campaign plan set
01.02.2023, 16:46 • Crime
Andrew Tate loses latest appeal against detention in human-trafficking case
01.02.2023, 16:58 • Crime
Possession of heroin and cocaine no longer a crime in province in radical move
01.02.2023, 17:14 • Crime
Man sues police when he loses his job after cops include him in fugitive list
01.02.2023, 17:29 • Crime
Brit imprisoned in Morocco after unknowingly buying drink with counterfeit money