News: 0179222082

  ARM Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set fire to him and he's warm for the rest of his life (Terry Pratchett, Jingo)

Thieves Busted After Stealing a Cellphone from a Security Expert's Wife (elpais.com)

(Sunday September 14, 2025 @03:34AM (EditorDavid) from the very-wrong-number dept.)


They stole a woman's phone in Barcelona. Unfortunately, her husband was security consultant/penetration tester Martin Vigo, [1]reports Spain's newspaper El Pais .

"His weeks-long investigation coincided with a massive two-year police operation between 2022 and 2024 in six countries where 17 people were arrested: Spain, Argentina, Colombia, Chile, Ecuador, and Peru...."

> In Vigo's case, the phone was locked and the "Find my iPhone" feature was activated... Once stolen, the phones are likely wrapped in aluminum foil to prevent the GPS from tracking their movements. "Then they go to a safe house where they are gathered together and shipped on pallets outside of Spain, to Morocco or China." This international step is vital to prevent the phone from being blocked if the thieves try to use it again. Carriers in several European countries share lists of the IMEIs (unique numbers for each device) of stolen devices so they can't be used. But Morocco, for example, doesn't share these lists. There, the phone can be reconnected...

>

> With hundreds or thousands of stored phones, another path begins: "They try to get the PIN," says Vigo. Why the PIN? Because with the PIN, you can change the Apple password and access the device's content. The gang had created a system to send thousands of text messages like the one Vigo received. To know who to target with the bait message, the police say, "the organization performed social profiling of the victims, since, in many cases, in addition to the phone, they also had the victim's personal belongings, such as their ID." This is how they obtained the phone numbers to send the malicious SMS...

>

> Each victim received a unique link, and the server knew which victim clicked it... With the first click, the attackers would redirect the user to a website they believed was credible, such as Apple's real iCloud site... [T]he next day you receive another text message, and you click on it, more confidently. However, that link no longer redirects you to the real Apple website, but to a flawless copy created by the criminals: that's where they ask for your PIN, and without thinking, full of hope, you enter it... "The PIN is more powerful than your fingerprint or face. With it, you can delete the victim's biometric information and add your own to access banking apps that are validated this way," says Vigo. Apple Wallet asks you to re-authenticate, and then everything is accessible...

>

> In the press release on the case, the police explained that the gang allegedly used a total of 5,300 fake websites and illegally unlocked around 1.3 million high-end devices, about 30,000 of them in Spain.

Vigo tells El Pais that if the PIN doesn't unlock the device, the criminal gang then sends it to China to be "dismantled and then sent back to Europe for resale. The devices are increasingly valuable because they have more advanced chips, better cameras, and [2]more expensive materials ."

To render the phone untraceable in China, "they change certain components and the IMEI. It requires a certain level of sophistication: opening the phone, changing the chip..."



[1] https://english.elpais.com/technology/2025-09-13/never-steal-a-hackers-girlfriends-phone-how-an-expert-exposed-a-global-network-of-thieves.html

[2] https://english.elpais.com/science-tech/2023-03-27/how-to-properly-charge-your-phones-battery-and-how-to-solve-its-problems.html



Ambiguous wording... (Score:3)

by Cochonou ( 576531 )

The article is very interesting, as it unveils how these criminal rings are working...

However the article does not make it clear at all that the arrestations were actually the result of the security researcher actions.

Re: (Score:2)

by Samare ( 2779329 )

It doesn't look like he actually did anything.

> Vigo tried to find out who was behind [the PIN-stealing system], but he only got as far as a woman he believed to be Ukrainian, and he didn’t know if she was another victim or part of the gang.

Interesting...but.... (Score:2)

by registrations_suck ( 1075251 )

It seems like an awful lot of work to make a used, stolen phone usable. I understand it is more if they actually get some' spin.

In any event, these are some hardworking thieves. Imagine if they could be bothered to put their intellect and work ethic into more legal activities! They could really do some nice work.

Re: (Score:2)

by Mr. Dollar Ton ( 5495648 )

> Imagine if they could be bothered to put their intellect and work ethic into more legal activities!

Imagine such activities aren't available to them, say because of high tariffs meant to protect less hardworking, dumber workforce.

What then?

Original in Spanish (Score:2)

by ChunderDownunder ( 709234 )

[1]https://elpais.com/tecnologia/... [elpais.com]

[1] https://elpais.com/tecnologia/2025-09-06/nunca-le-robes-el-movil-a-la-novia-de-un-hacker-como-un-experto-puso-al-descubierto-una-red-global-de-ladrones.html

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