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Manhattan district attorney Cyrus Vance speaks at an event at Pace University on Feb. 28, Cybercrime in the World Today 2013. Vance said cybercrime is the fastest growing crime trend in New York. (Joshua Philipp/The Epoch Times)
“Cybercrime is the fastest growing crime trend in New York, and around the country,” said Manhattan district attorney Cyrus Vance, during a cybercrime symposium at Pace University on Feb. 28. “The Manhattan police precincts now record cybercrime and identity theft as their most frequently reported complaints.”
According to Vance, cybercrime isn’t just a growing trend—it’s a fundamental shift in the way modern crime works. It has already reached a point where nearly every crime in the city involves a cyber component.
“It is rare that a case does not involve some kind of cyber or computer element that we prosecute in our office—whether it is homicide, whether it’s a financial crime case, whether it’s a gang case where the gang members are posting on Facebook where they’re going to meet,” said Vance.
It’s not just small-time crooks acting on their own, either. Many local criminals are working with international hackers—often hired guns in the former Soviet bloc who can help them con people from the other side of the world. Vance said organized crime rings are also getting in on the game, and are realizing that cybercrime is less risky, yet more lucrative than even the drug trade.
Fighting cybercrime
The situation isn’t all doom and gloom, however, and New York City is helping lead the way in a cross-department battle against cybercrime.
“So what do we do about this, how can we stop it, what kind of recovery plans do we need to have in place?” said Pace University President Stephen Friedman said during a speech at the Pace event, citing news of cybercrime and Chinese hackers targeting U.S. critical infrastructure.
“I believe that answering those questions requires the kinds of cooperation and partnership that we see here today,” Friedman said.
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The panel of speakers at the Feb. 28, Cybercrime in the World Today 2013 event at Manhattan’s Pace University stand for a photo. Pictured from left to right, assistant special agent in charge of the U.S. Secret Service New York Field Office, Deloitte & Touche LLP principal Kelly Bissell, ACCA CEO Helen Brand, Pace University Computer Information Systems Chair Dr. Darren Hayes, Federal Reserve Bank of New York officer Joe Leonard, Co-founder of the Verizon Business Investigative Response Unit Christopher Novak, and chief of the Manhattan DA investigative division David Szuchman. (Joshua Philipp/The Epoch Times)
The basic purpose of the ECTF, it states, “is the prevention, detection, mitigation and aggressive investigation of attacks on the nation’s financial and critical infrastructures.”
Paul Mahon, the assistant special agent in charge of the U.S. Secret Service New York Field Office, who moderated the Pace event, said his office is available to help local businesses with cybersecurity.
“For private industries, the Secret Service—through DHS and through the PATRIOT Act—has been mandated to reach out to you and help in any way that we can,” Mahon said. “There’s no cost associated with it.”
“If a small company does want to talk about their security system, we can give them free advice on how to best protect [their networks],” he said.
The Manhattan District Attorney’s office also received $4.2 million last year to build a cybercrime lab. It works as the city’s CSI lab for computers, where investigators can sift through data for evidence and search hacked hard drives for digital fingerprints.
Working with digital evidence isn’t easy, however. Computer forensics can be even more difficult to work with than physical evidence.
“You have to prove to the court that the data hasn’t been altered, that it does stand, and the accused was the one who should be standing trial,” Mahon said. “It’s a tumultuous process.”
At the end of the day, however, cybercrime is a new field for both criminals and law enforcement. Vance said that while more crime in New York is moving to the wires, through the cooperation between businesses, academia, and local and federal law enforcement, “we are in Manhattan having a lot of success.”
He said that when most of us think of “crime scenes,” TV shows like “Law and Order” may come to mind—with yellow tape and the flashing lights of police cars. “But I think we all know today, the crime scene we think of is a different type of crime scene.”
“And now when I look back to the 1980s, when I was an assistant DA, we could not have had a more different picture of criminal trends in Manhattan than we do today,” Vance said. “Today, it’s identity theft and cybercrime. That’s what’s happening in every neighborhood around Manhattan, and I think, around the country.”
Source: theepochtimes.com