LockBit ransomware gang disrupted by international law enforcement operation


LockBit — the most prolific ransomware group in the world — had its website seized Monday as part of an international law enforcement operation that involved the U.K.’s National Crime Agency, the FBI, Europol and several international police agencies.

“This site is now under the control of the National Crime Agency of the UK, working in close cooperation with the FBI and the international law enforcement task force, ‘Operation Cronos’,” a seizure notice on the group’s website said. “We can confirm that Lockbit’s services have been disrupted as a result of International Law Enforcement action — this is an ongoing and developing operation.”

The group has far outpaced other ransomware gangs since it emerged in late 2019, with researchers at Recorded Future attributing nearly 2,300 attacks to the group. Conti — the second most active group — has only been publicly linked to 883 attacks.

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But LockBit has also gained a reputation for the damage it has caused and the organizations it has targeted. Although the group previously claimed to have rules prohibiting attacks on hospitals, it hit Canada’s largest children’s hospital during the 2022 Christmas season, as well as multiple healthcare facilities in the U.S. and abroad. Last month, the group said it was behind a November attack on a hospital system that forced multiple facilities in Pennsylvania and New Jersey to cancel appointments.

“In a highly competitive and cutthroat marketplace, LockBit rose to become the most prolific and dominant ransomware operator,” said Don Smith, vice president of threat research at Secureworks CTU. “It approached ransomware as a global business opportunity and aligned its operations, accordingly, scaling through affiliates at a rate that simply dwarfed other operations.”

The takedown is just the latest in a series of law enforcement actions targeting ransomware gangs — late last year, the FBI and other agencies took down sites and infrastructure belonging to Qakbot, Rangar Locker and other groups.

“This has been a year of action for the Justice Department in our efforts to pivot to a strategy of disruption,” Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco said Friday at…

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