The US Department of Justice revealed that the Microsoft Office 365 email accounts of employees at 27 US Attorneys’ offices were hacked by the Russia-linked SVR (aka APT29, Cozy Bear, and The Dukes) during the SolarWinds attack.
The news of the intrusion was first acknowledged in a statement issued by DoJ on January 6, 2021, at the time the Department said that this activity constituted a major incident under the Federal Information Security Modernization Act (FISMA). After learning of the security breach, the Office of the Chief Information Officer fixed the issue exploited by the hackers and notified the appropriate federal agencies, Congress, and the public as warranted.
The list of impacted state attorneys’ offices includes:
“The Department is responding to this incident as if the Advanced Persistent Threat (APT) group responsible for the SolarWinds breach had access to all email communications and attachments found within the compromised O365 accounts. The APT is believed to have access to compromised accounts from approximately May 7 to December 27, 2020. The compromised data included all sent, received, and stored emails and attachments found within those accounts during that time.” reads the update provided by DoJ. “While other districts were impacted to a lesser degree, the APT group gained access to the O365 email accounts of at least 80 percent of employees working in the U.S. Attorneys’ offices located in the Eastern, Northern, Southern, and Western Districts of New York.”
According to DoJ, the state-sponsored hackers compromised the Office 365 email accounts of at least 80 percent of employees from US Attorneys’ offices located in the Eastern, Northern, Southern, and Western Districts of New York.
The intrusion took place between May 7 to December 27, 2020.
In April, The U.S. and UK formally attributed with “high confidence” the SolarWinds supply chain attack to Russia’s Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR).
The SVR also stole “red team tools,” used by security firms to mimic the techniques of attacks associated with known threat actors and help their customers to detect them.
In April, the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA), the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) published a joint advisory that warned that Russia-linked APT group SVR was exploiting five vulnerabilities in attacks against U.S. targets.
Cyberspies leveraged these flaws to obtain login credentials and use them to break into networks of US organizations and government agencies.
The vulnerabilities listed in the advisory are:
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