A U.S. Supreme Court Compromised by “Conti” Ransomware Actors

Last updated June 23, 2021
Written by:
Bill Toulas
Bill Toulas
Cybersecurity Journalist

The recently formed group of ransomware actors behind the “Conti” moniker have carried out a bold attack against an American court, which is something that we see for the first time. The reported victim court has denied the incident ever happened so we had to remove the mention. However, the hackers are already leaking samples of the stolen files on their dedicated dark web page.

The files presented there include sensitive documents relevant to cases reviewed by the court, containing information about jurors, witnesses, defendant pleas, etc. The repercussions for those exposed are dire, and it is unknown if the court ever notified the affected individuals.

court leaks

Source: Computer Business Review

Right now, the court’s official net portal is down and has been like that for a couple of days. Either the IT team is working towards cleaning the servers, or the actors are trying to somehow draw the attention of those responsible.

The public sector is always a tricky target because getting a response from the administrative teams is sometimes challenging. Similarly, getting payments can be proven complicated, but notorious ransomware groups have been trying that nonetheless. Still, this is the first incident that concerns a US court, and which involves data exfiltration and leakage.

The fact that this is the work of Conti was confirmed by Emsisoft, an expert in the field who tracks ransomware attacks and attributes them based on the traces left behind or other indications. They, too, confirmed that this is the first of its kind and the 207th ransomware attack that is hitting a public sector entity so far in 2020.

Conti is a particularly nasty piece of malware that executes up to 160 individual commands, trying to wreak havoc and make the work of first-responders a lot harder. Also, as we have discussed before, Conti is propagated by skillful and experienced hackers who know their way around.

Related: A Volkswagen Dealership Has Been Hit by “Conti” Ransomware

Hank Schless, the Senior Manager at Lookout, has provided us with the following comment on the incident:

This situation highlights how every organization possesses valuable data that threat actors can hold for ransom and paralyze operations. As some organizations use a hybrid model of on-prem and cloud servers, they need to deploy modern security solutions that protect assets connecting to cloud services.

An advanced hacking group like the one behind Conti would likely use social engineering to convince a target employee to download a document or file to their device. Phishing attempts are getting more difficult to spot, especially on mobile devices where we can’t spot many of the red flags we’re trained to see on computers.

We have no way to tell if this attack was the result of a phishing attempt against one of the court’s employees, but it looks like Hank is giving some serious chances to this scenario. It is highly unlikely that the victimized court will publish a statement detailing the specifics of the attack since they already denied there was a cyber-attack affecting them. That said, we’ll have to contain ourselves to assumptions on this one.



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