International piracy ring targeted Hollywood film companies, prosecutors say
Los Angeles: Five men accused of operating an international movie piracy ring have been charged after allegedly hacking into the computer systems of Hollywood film companies to steal unreleased movies and TV shows such as Fifty Shades of Grey and The Walking Dead.
A scene from The Walking Dead Season 6 Episode 12.Credit:AMC
Federal prosecutors say the group would alter the properties of computer files to make them easier to distribute online and either offer them for sale or upload them onto pirate movie websites. They are accused of selling access to the stolen films via PayPal as part of the scheme that ran from 2013 to 2015, according to prosecutors.
Investigators discovered more than 25,000 motion pictures, including Godzilla, How to Train Your Dragon 2 and Horrible Bosses 2, had been uploaded to a server in France.
It is not clear how many or which film companies were targeted.
The men – Malik Luqman Farooq, Aditya Raj, Sam Nhance, Ghobhirajah Selvarajah and Jitesh Jadhav – face seven counts, including conspiracy to commit computer fraud, unauthorised access to a computer, aggravated identity theft and copyright infringement, according to the US Attorney's Office.
The indictment alleges Farooq sold more than a dozen stolen films, while Raj released pirated movies online. Selvarajah was the registered owner of the group's PayPal account, and Nhance maintained a computer server that stored the digital files for distribution, according to the indictment.
Authorities said Jadhav used a camcorder to film movies such as The Amazing Spider-Man 2, X-Men: Days of Future Past and Dawn of the Planet of the Apes that later were sold by other members of the ring.
Authorities suspect the men are based in four countries: the United Kingdom, the United Arab Emirates, Malaysia and India. Farooq, 30, is the only one who has been arrested. He is awaiting trial in London on related charges.
Los Angeles Times
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