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Police Linked To Hacking Campaign To Frame Indian Activists (wired.com) 61

Police forces around the world have increasingly used hacking tools to identify and track protesters, expose political dissidents' secrets, and turn activists' computers and phones into inescapable eavesdropping bugs. Now, new clues in a case in India connect law enforcement to a hacking campaign that used those tools to go an appalling step further: planting false incriminating files on targets' computers that the same police then used as grounds to arrest and jail them. Wired: More than a year ago, forensic analysts revealed that unidentified hackers fabricated evidence on the computers of at least two activists arrested in Pune, India, in 2018, both of whom have languished in jail and, along with 13 others, face terrorism charges. Researchers at security firm SentinelOne and nonprofits Citizen Lab and Amnesty International have since linked that evidence fabrication to a broader hacking operation that targeted hundreds of individuals over nearly a decade, using phishing emails to infect targeted computers with spyware, as well as smartphone hacking tools sold by the Israeli hacking contractor NSO Group. But only now have SentinelOne's researchers revealed ties between the hackers and a government entity: none other than the very same Indian police agency in the city of Pune that arrested multiple activists based on the fabricated evidence.

"There's a provable connection between the individuals who arrested these folks and the individuals who planted the evidence," says Juan Andres Guerrero-Saade, a security researcher at SentinelOne who, along with fellow researcher Tom Hegel, will present findings at the Black Hat security conference in August. "This is beyond ethically compromised. It is beyond callous. So we're trying to put as much data forward as we can in the hopes of helping these victims." SentinelOne's new findings that link the Pune City Police to the long-running hacking campaign, which the company has called Modified Elephant, center on two particular targets of the campaign: Rona Wilson and Varvara Rao. Both men are activists and human rights defenders who were jailed in 2018 as part of a group called the Bhima Koregaon 16, named for the village where violence between Hindus and Dalits -- the group once known as "untouchables" -- broke out earlier that year. (One of those 16 defendants, 84-year-old Jesuit priest Stan Swamy, died in jail last year after contracting Covid-19. Rao, who is 81 years old and in poor health, has been released on medical bail, which expires next month. Of the other 14, only one has been granted bail.)

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Police Linked To Hacking Campaign To Frame Indian Activists

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  • bye soviet russia? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by zlives ( 2009072 ) on Thursday June 16, 2022 @11:46AM (#62625176)

    in fascist india...

    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday June 16, 2022 @12:27PM (#62625304)

      in fascist india...

      The needful does YOU!

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      All countries have some bad cops.

  • by ThurstonMoore ( 605470 ) on Thursday June 16, 2022 @11:47AM (#62625182)

    Sounds about right for cop behavior.

    • by Alain Williams ( 2972 ) <addw@phcomp.co.uk> on Thursday June 16, 2022 @11:51AM (#62625194) Homepage

      None of whom will face jail time for the crime of fabricating evidence even if this is proven beyond reasonable doubt. Those (politicians) who set them up to do this should also be put in jail - likewise it will never happen.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by zlives ( 2009072 )

        in fascist india, evidence fabricates crime.

      • by Darinbob ( 1142669 ) on Thursday June 16, 2022 @03:51PM (#62625808)

        It may be the world's largest democracy, but it's highly corrupt from top to bottom and the rule of law is flimsy at best. And that was in the good days, before they got their dictator in charge. And maybe "dictator" is not an exaggeration either; party bosses in a state have immense power to rule by decree. One party boss declared that some houses belonging to a few muslims should be torn down and the next day the police did it; no judicial oversight, no legislative actions, nor checks or balances, a crime wasn't even fabricated, just the wish of the state's party leader. Why? Because muslims were protesting against a repulsive insult by a different BJP celebrity.

        That is clearly a broken democracy.

      • ... crime of fabricating evidence ...

        Since the war on terror, government agents planting files on a computer is not a crime in many countries. Also, India has a loose tribal culture that is still corrupt, so the 'haves' will not hold themselves accountable to the people. It's another democracy where the people don't have the power to change the government.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Indeed. The police needs to be tightly controlled and carefully monitored. The profession notoriously attracts the wrong people.

  • by Arnonyrnous Covvard ( 7286638 ) on Thursday June 16, 2022 @11:48AM (#62625190)
    And thus all evidence gathered through hacking becomes tainted, which the prophecy foretold as well.
    • by dgatwood ( 11270 ) on Thursday June 16, 2022 @12:01PM (#62625220) Homepage Journal

      And thus all evidence gathered through hacking becomes tainted, which the prophecy foretold as well.

      Fruit of the poisonous tree.

      As an aside, this is why Cellebrite and other companies like it that enable hacking by law enforcement should be treated in the same way as any other group that tries to hack people's devices, i.e. their staff should go to jail, and the company's assets should be seized.

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        hacking by law enforcement should be treated in the same way as any other group that tries to hack people's devices, i.e. their staff should go to jail, and the company's assets should be seized.

        I am all for that. Sure, you can search a computer _openly_ and with an order signed from a judge, but that is it. Yes, that puts some limits on what law enforcement can do, but not having these limits directly leads to a police state and that is far, far worse.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by PPH ( 736903 )

      You are making an assumption about Indian law based upon Western legal traditions. Tainted evidence may not be avoided to the degree that it is here. We hold Blackstone's Ratio in high regard. But to the Indians, that originated with a colonizing culture that they may very well reject. And following their independence, they allied rather comfortably with socialist regimes.

    • So you can't use the "evidence" in court.

      Only problem is to getting to court to proof that. Last I heard in India, it's not unusual for cases to take years before it gets before a judge.

      I think there were even instances where the person has been waiting in jail longer then the max sentence for whatever crime would have given them.

  • by q4Fry ( 1322209 )

    Get fucked, Shalev Hulio.

  • I truly wonder (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Slashythenkilly ( 7027842 ) on Thursday June 16, 2022 @12:22PM (#62625286)
    How many times this has happened in the U.S. 50 years ago Watergate revealed that the Nixon administration was willing to infiltrate the DNC, a burglary at an FBI office revealed that the Justice Dept was spying on local protesters, and fast forwarding to 2012 we find out through Ed Snowden that the NSA is tracking every single citizen under the guise of national security. It didnt make me too nervous until Epstein and his partner in Europe mysteriously committed suicide. We live in dangerous times.
    • FBI = US GESTAPO.

    • How many times this has happened in the U.S. ...

      Rule of thumb: Some (many) of them are ALWAYS doing it.

      It only seems like "they used to do it back in the bad old days, but they're clean(er) now" because it's done in secret, so it takes a while - like decades - for news of each new operation to leak out into public consciousness - during which time the operation grows, spreads, and becomes more effective and broadly applied.

      The institution is an economy with negative values prominent in the reward strucure,

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      It's simple enough to do that the average cop could easily plant evidence on a computer. The "experts" employed to do a forensic analysis are not going to be questioning what they find too closely, and in the UK there is very little chance of getting your own expert to examine the data independently.

      It's not just computer data either, it affects all evidence gathered by the police. People have spent years in jail because a police fingerprint "expert" claimed that there was a match, only for them to be relea

    • Watergate et. al. were spying issues. Quite different from actively planting terrorist data on people that irritate them.

      US cops never do that. They plant drugs instead. Much easier and less likely to be found out. Or possibly child porn. Not terror.

  • This is a conflict between a former slave class and their oppressors. The Hindu religious caste lead by divine birthright (wear yellow), but the warrior caste are the enforcers (wear red).
  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Thursday June 16, 2022 @12:26PM (#62625302)
    In Phoenix, Az where the cops were trying to pin charges on peaceful protesters from the George Floyd protests. The police chief was forced to resign and there's a prosecutor who will get fired... Maybe. When cops do stuff like this there's never enough consequences and they usually just get a new job in the next precinct over.
  • Police have been planting evidence, often framing people out of favor with the government in power for a long long time. It is more rampant in some countries compared to others.

    What is different with computers and hacking is, there is now evidence of planting the evidence! When cop puts a bag of crack in your car, there is no easy way to prove it was planted. But, in the case of computers the police can, and do, get caught red handed!

    • If you get a chance, there was an amazing mini-series on HBO recently called "We own this city" from David Simon (The same guy who did The Wire, so you know its gonna be good). This time however unlike the Wire its a true story about the Gun Trace Task Force that basically turned Baltimores lower class into a cash pinata , framing people, extorting people, stealing unbelievable amounts of money from both criminals and regular civilians, and just being the most corrupt motherfuckers imaginable, until their o

      • I'm sure theres plenty of good cops, but you still have to ask if all these good cops are really good cops, why dont they arrest their crooked collegues?

        Because making law-enforcement moves against another cop causes all the other cops to stop trusting the cop who does it - which leads to all sorts of career-limiting, and even life-risking, side effects. So they generally look the other way.

        The US constitutional approach to answering the "who will watch the watchmen?" question is to let the accused go free

      • by q4Fry ( 1322209 )

        You may be interested in this ProPublica story [propublica.org] on how one of the actors in that show was shot (but survived) by a friend in front of another friend's house and it was a near thing that they were able to convict the assailant because nobody in Baltimore trusts the cops.

  • fight the future (Score:4, Insightful)

    by cats-paw ( 34890 ) on Thursday June 16, 2022 @01:06PM (#62625420) Homepage

    Unfortunately a bodycam will not catch police doing shit like this.

    It is _extremely_ worrying. This is a great way to target purely political opponents and convict them of "real" crimes.

    at the start of authoritarianism it might be a little troublesome to convict people of not showing enough love to the dear leader, but easy to convict them of having kiddy porn both in law court and the court of public opinion.

    Be afraid, be very afraid.

  • by Impy the Impiuos Imp ( 442658 ) on Thursday June 16, 2022 @01:58PM (#62625540) Journal

    The modern panopticon is a dictator's sweetest dream.

    Previously, you used police powers to invade the house, body, papers of political opponents to hurt them. This was the driving force behind the creation of things like the 4th and 5th Amendments. To stop Tyrant Kings from using government's power of investigation against political opponents.

    But now that everything is online, you are your online presence, and it's trivial to scour all your papers.

    And it that isn't enough, fuck with them.

    Many a virtual marijuana baggie, easy to toss down on a virtual floor.

    • Previously, you used police powers to invade the house, body, papers of political opponents to hurt them. This was the driving force behind the creation of things like the 4th and 5th Amendments.

      Also the 3rd amendment. The troops that the Brits made their occupied people house and feed weren't just an annoying expense. They also doubled as spies - listening in on conversations, reading papers when nobody was looking, reporting to their officers on anything they found.

      Modern spyware, keyloggers, and the li

  • It is not Hindus vs Dalits. It is Government vs Dalit Activists both of whom contain Hindus and Christians.

  • Running Man came out in 1987. Honestly, I'm somewhat surprised that we haven't seen something like this with deep fakes, yet.
  • "Politicians and diapers must be changed often, and for the same reason"--Mark Twain (b. 1835)

"When the going gets tough, the tough get empirical." -- Jon Carroll

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