Angel Parents say Loyola student’s killing was preventable, condemn Gov Pritzker

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The fatal shooting of 18-year-old college student Sheridan Gorman has reignited debate over Illinois’ sanctuary state status, as grieving Angel Parents demand accountability for what they say was a “preventable” tragedy.

Authorities said Gorman, a student at Loyola University, was shot and killed by a migrant in the country illegally. For Angel Parents like Jennifer Bos and Joe Abraham, the loss hits close to home.

“This was preventable and should have never happened. We just don’t have serious leaders in Illinois,” Abraham said Wednesday on “The Faulkner Focus.”

Joe Abraham holds photo of himself and daughter Katie.

Joe Abraham holds a photograph of himself with his 20-year-old daughter, Katie Abraham, at his family’s home in Glenview, Illinois, on Sept. 10, 2025. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

Abraham’s daughter Katie was killed by an illegal immigrant in January 2025. He’s spoken about not hearing from Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker in the wake of her death and has called for changes to the state’s sanctuary policies.

CHICAGO MAYOR ASKED ABOUT CITY’S IMMIGRATION POLICIES AFTER ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT ALLEGEDLY KILLED COLLEGE STUDENT

“This is what I was talking about. This is what I wanted to stop, and I just knew it was going to happen again, unfortunately,” Abraham said, adding that he knows the loss the Gorman family is feeling.

“They’re going to have so many sleepless nights. I know the exact questions that are going to run through their head, and my heart goes to them. I pray for them every night for strength to get through this and find some comfort,” he said.

Angel families attend DHS oversight hearing in Washington.

Jennifer Bos, whose daughter Megan was killed by an illegal immigrant, listens alongside other “Angel families” as DHS Secretary Kristi Noem testifies during a House Judiciary Committee oversight hearing in the Rayburn House Office Building in Washington, D.C., on March 4. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

Pritzker’s office told Fox News Digital on Monday that their “thoughts are with the family, friends, and Loyola University community grieving the senseless murder of Sheridan Gorman.”

CHICAGO LAWMAKER RIPPED OVER ‘DISGUSTING’ RESPONSE TO COLLEGE STUDENT KILLED BY ALLEGED ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT

The statement added that crime has no place in Chicago streets, and that the perpetrator is expected to be held accountable to the fullest extent of the law.

But for Jennifer Bos, holding one suspect accountable isn’t enough to stop this from happening again. Her 37-year-old daughter, Megan Bos, disappeared in 2025 and was later found in a container behind the home of an illegal immigrant outside Chicago.

CHICAGO ALDERWOMAN APOLOGIZES FOR ‘WRONG PLACE AT THE WRONG TIME’ COMMENT ON SLAIN STUDENT

“They’re going to have to fight for themselves and for their daughter. They’re going to have to fight for that justice because Illinois does not give it to you,” Bos said of the Gorman family Wednesday on “America’s Newsroom.”

“People are outraged that families are being separated and all of this, but they’re being separated by a border,” she said. “As another angel mom says — Agnes Gibboney — she says, we’re separated by 6 feet of dirt and a coffin. That’s forever.”

Sheridan Gorman in Chicago, Illinois

Sheridan Gorman, a New York native, was reportedly only a few months away from completing her freshman year at Loyola University Chicago in Illinois. (Sheridan G. Gorman via Instagram)

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Pritzker has faced criticism after Gorman’s death and for his comments on federal agent-involved deaths in Minneapolis. The criticism also follows an influx of illegal migrants into Chicago during the Biden administration. 

The Department of Homeland Security announced the suspect in Gorman’s death, Jose Medina-Medina, was a Venezuelan national who was apprehended by U.S. Border Patrol in May 2023, before he was released into the country. Despite a later arrest for shoplifting in June 2023, Medina-Medina was released again, according to the agency.



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Up:ISI people from America and Dubai are trapping the youth of India, Zoom meeting every third day; This work is being done – Shamli: Isi Network Is Operating From America, Dubai, Nepal And Bangladesh, Youth Of India Are Getting Trapped

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Shamli: ISI network is operating from America, Dubai, Nepal and Bangladesh, youth of India are getting trapped

ISI. Symbolic picture. – Photo: AI

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A large international network of ISI has been exposed during the interrogation of Sameer and others, resident of Butrada village of Shamli, who were caught by Ghaziabad Police on espionage charges. According to the inputs received by the investigating agencies, this network was being operated from countries like Nepal, Dubai, America and Bangladesh, where the agents sitting were trapping the youth of India.
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Documentation can contain malicious instructions for agents • The Register

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A new service that helps coding agents stay up to date on their API calls could be dialing in a massive supply chain vulnerability.

Two weeks ago, Andrew Ng, an AI entrepreneur and adjunct professor at Stanford, launched Context Hub, a service for supplying coding agents with API documentation.

“Coding agents often use outdated APIs and hallucinate parameters,” Ng wrote in a LinkedIn post. “For example, when I ask Claude Code to call OpenAI’s GPT-5.2, it uses the older chat completions API instead of the newer responses API, even though the newer one has been out for a year. Context Hub solves this.”

Perhaps so. But at the same time, the service appears to provide a way to dupe coding agents by simplifying software supply chain attacks: The documentation portal can be used to poison AI agents with malicious instructions.

Mickey Shmueli, creator of an alternative curated service called lap.sh, has published a proof-of-concept attack that demonstrates the risk. 

“Context Hub delivers documentation to AI agents through an MCP server,” Shmueli wrote in an explanatory blog post. “Contributors submit docs as GitHub pull requests, maintainers merge them, and agents fetch the content on demand. The pipeline has zero content sanitization at every stage.”

It’s been known for some time in the developer community that AI models sometimes hallucinate package names, a shortcoming that security experts have shown can be exploited by uploading malicious code under the invented package name.

Shmueli’s PoC cuts out the hallucination step by suggesting fake dependencies in documentation that coding agents then incorporate into configuration files (e.g. requirements.txt) and generated code.

The attacker simply creates a pull request – a submitted change to the repo – and if it gets accepted, the poisoning is complete. Currently, the chance of that happening appears to be pretty good. Among 97 closed PRs, 58 were merged.

Shmueli told The Register in an email, “The review process appears to prioritize documentation volume over security review. Doc PRs merge quickly, some by core team members themselves. I didn’t find any evidence in the GitHub repo of automated scanning for executable instructions or package references in submitted docs, though I can’t say for certain what happens internally.”

He said he didn’t submit a PR to test how Content Hub responded “because the public record showed security contributions weren’t being engaged.” And he pointed to several open issues and pull requests dealing with security concerns as evidence.

Ng did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

“The agent fetches documentation from [Context Hub], reads the poisoned content, and builds the project,” Shmueli said in his post. “The response looks completely normal. Working code. Clean instructions. No warnings.”

None of this is particularly surprising given that it’s simply a variation on the unsolved risk of AI models – indirect prompt injection. When AI models process content, they cannot reliably distinguish between data and system instructions.

For the PoC, two poisoned documents were created, one for Plaid Link and one for Stripe Checkout, each of which contained a fake PyPI package name.

In 40 runs, Anthropopic’s Haiku model wrote the malicious package cited in the docs into the project’s requirement.txt file every time, without any mention of that in its output. The company’s Sonnet model did better, issuing warnings in 48 percent of the runs (19/40) but still wrote the malicious library into requirements.txt 53 percent of the time (21/40). The AI biz’s top-of-the-line Opus model did better still, issuing warnings 75 percent of the time (30/40) and didn’t end up writing the bad dependency to the requirements.txt file or code.

Shmueli said Opus “is trained better, on more packages, and it’s more sophisticated.”

So while higher-end commercial models appear to be capable of catching fabulated dependencies, the problem is broader than just Context Hub. According to Shmueli, all the other systems for making community-authored documentation available to AI models fall short when it comes to content sanitization

Exposure to untrusted content is one of the three risks cited by developer Simon Willison in his lethal trifecta AI security model. So given unvetted documentation as the status quo, you’d be well-advised to ensure either that your AI agent has no network access, or at the very least no access to private data. ®



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Philippines farmers feeling the pinch of the war on Iran | Oil and Gas

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Cabbage farmers in the Philippines are harvesting their crops at a loss as prices plunge and fuel costs soar, amid a national energy emergency linked to the US-Israel war on Iran.



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US Army expands recruitment amid Middle East conflict and tech needs

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The U.S. Army is raising its maximum recruitment age from 35 to 42, while also relaxing rules for recruits with certain drug convictions.

The changes will go into effect on April 20, according to Army Regulation 601–210, which was published March 20. 

The minimum age to join the Army is 18, but recruits can enlist at 17 with parental consent. 

74 RETIRED US GENERALS, ADMIRALS BACK IRAN STRIKES, WARN TEHRAN SEEKS TO ‘SPILL AMERICAN BLOOD’

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The two fallen soldiers were identified as Staff Sgt. Saul Fabian Gonzalez, 26, of Pullman, Michigan, and Sgt. 1st Class Emmett Wilfred Goodridge Jr., 40, of Roseville, Minnesota. ((Photo by Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto via Getty Images))

In addition to the age requirement, the Army removed restrictions for recruits who have a single conviction for possession of marijuana or drug paraphernalia. 

Previously, such a conviction would have required a waiver from the Pentagon and the passing of a drug test

Currently, the Navy and Air Force permit recruits over the age of 40, but the Marine Corps’ maximum age for enlistment is 28. 

REP BRIAN MAST: CONGRESS HAS THE PERFECT WAY TO HONOR OUR NATION’S FALLEN HEROES

An Army uniform

The U.S. Army has raised its maximum enlistment age from 35 to 42, the military branch said.  ( Sarah Crabill/Getty Images)

In fiscal year 2025, the Army saw a recruiting bump following several years of decline. That year, the military branch recruited more than 62,000 people, surpassing its goal of 61,000, according to the Pentagon. 

In 2022, the Army missed its recruitment goal by 25%. 

A 2022 RAND report recommended the Army increase the maximum age for enlistment, saying that older recruits represent a potential growth area. 

The report noted that the quality of older recruits was generally “high” and that age didn’t appear to “pose a significant barrier to accession.”

Army Sgt. Drew Scheffer, assigned to Joint Task Force Southern Border, provides surveillance over the southern border near Santa Teresa, N.M., April 12, 2025.

Army Sgt. Drew Scheffer, assigned to Joint Task Force Southern Border, provides surveillance over the southern border near Santa Teresa, N.M. on April 12. The military has been patrolling the southern border as part of the Trump administration crackdown on illegal migration.  (Department of Defense)

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“We’re kind of looking at a more mature audience that might have experience in technical fields,” said Angela Chipman, chief of military personnel accessions at the US army, according to Task & Purpose. “We need warrant officers with extreme technical capabilities, and those will come from the enlisted ranks.”

However, older recruits were less likely to complete basic training and had higher attrition rates, the report states. 

The policy changes come as the U.S. wages war with Iran with the deployment of 2,000 soldiers from the US Army’s elite 82nd Airborne Division and Marines to the Middle East. 



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Barcelona hammer Real Madrid in Women’s Champions League quarterfinals | Football News

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Defeated finalists last season, Barcelona have now gone 25 games unbeaten with latest win against fierce football rivals.

Barcelona have powered into a commanding 6-2 lead over rivals Real Madrid in an all-Spanish Women’s Champions League quarterfinal first leg.

Pere Romeu’s side, who have dominated the football competition in recent years, moved two goals ahead through Ewa Pajor and Esmee Brugts inside 13 minutes on Wednesday.

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Linda Caicedo pulled one back for hosts Real Madrid at the Alfredo Di Stefano Stadium, but Irene Paredes quickly restored Barca’s two-goal lead.

Pajor and Vicky Lopez netted in the second half before Caicedo struck again for Madrid to give them some faint hope. Alexia Putellas added a late penalty to leave the Catalans with one foot firmly in the semifinals.

Barca, now unbeaten in their last 25 games across all competitions, finished runners-up to Arsenal last season.

The three-time winners have reached five straight finals and are on the brink of an eighth consecutive semifinal, without injured three-time Ballon d’Or winner Aitana Bonmati.

Instead, it was two-time winner Putellas who created the opener for Barca’s top scorer Pajor.

Patri Guijarro’s clever dink over the top allowed Putellas to square for Pajor to stab her fifth Champions League goal this season into an empty net.

Lopez’s looping cross was met by Brugts for Barca’s second, with Madrid goalkeeper Misa Rodriguez pushing the ball into the air only to have it drop down and over the line, with defender Maelle Lakrar unable to keep it out.

Pajor should have extended Barca’s lead but, through on goal, took the ball too close to Rodriguez, who managed to knock it to safety.

A few minutes later, Pau Quesada’s Madrid pulled one back through Caicedo, who got in behind Barca’s defence, rounded goalkeeper Cata Coll, and fired home.

Madrid’s happiness was short-lived as two minutes later, Paredes restored Barca’s advantage with a towering header from a corner.

Polish striker Pajor netted her second with a cool finish before the hour mark when 18-year-old midfielder Clara Serrajordi sent her through on goal.

Lopez added the fifth with a low finish from Caroline Graham Hansen’s cut-back as Barca humiliated their rivals.

The Catalans have won all four matches they have played against Real Madrid this season, scoring 16 goals to Madrid’s two.

The bad news for Madrid is that they have to face Barca again in Liga F at the weekend, before the second leg next week, with this the first of three Clasicos in nine days.

The good news is that Barca seem to have no answer to Colombian attacker Caicedo, who curled into the top corner from the edge of the box to pull another one back for the hosts.

Putellas converted from the penalty spot late on after Hansen was felled to round off the rout and minimise Madrid’s chances of a comeback.

Madrid, who have never reached the semifinals before, will have to record only their second-ever victory against Barca to progress, with the Catalans winning 22 of their 23 encounters to date.



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Former OHL player Jacob Winterton dead at 25 after battle with cancer

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Former Ontario Hockey League (OHL) player Jacob Winterton, the older brother of Seattle Kraken center Ryan Winterton, has died following his battle with cancer, the league confirmed in a statement Wednesday. He was 25. 

“The OHL is saddened by news of the passing of former Flint Firebirds and Oshawa Generals forward Jacob Winterton, taken far too soon following a battle with cancer at the age of 25,” the OHL’s statement read. 

Jacob Winterton skating on ice during hockey game at Paramount Fine Foods Centre

Jacob Winterton of the Oshawa Generals skates against the Mississauga Steelheads during a game at Paramount Fine Foods Centre in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada, on Oct. 25, 2019. (Graig Abel/Getty Images)

“The OHL sends thoughts and condolences to the Winterton family, as well as Jacob’s friends during this difficult time.”

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Winterton, who had celebrated his birthday in January, played two seasons in the OHL, including time with the Firebirds during the 2018-19 season and with the Generals during the 2019-20 season. He registered 18 goals, 19 assists and 37 points across 125 games before moving on to play four seasons at the University of Guelph.

“The Oshawa Generals are deeply saddened to hear of the passing of former General Jacob Winterton. Our condolences go out to his family, friends and the greater hockey community,” the team said in a statement posted on X. 

“Jacob and his family are in our thoughts today. Condolences from the Firebirds as we lose one of our own far too young,” the team said in a separate post. 

Jacob Winterton skating with the puck during an OHL game

Jacob Winterton of the Oshawa Generals skates with the puck during an OHL game against the Guelph Storm at the Tribute Communities Centre in Oshawa, Ont., on Dec. 15, 2019. (Chris Tanouye/Getty Images)

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Ryan Winterton, who followed his brother into the OHL before making his NHL appearance, took a temporary leave of absence to “attend to a family matter,” the team announced Monday.

On Tuesday, Ryan Winterton shared a heartbreaking farewell message to his older brother. 

“Today I lost my best friend. You weren’t just someone I loved, you were someone I looked up to, someone who guided me, believed in me, and helped shape the person I am today. Watching you fight so hard and still having to say goodbye is a pain that never really fades.

Ryan Winterton skating on ice during warm up at Prudential Center

Ryan Winterton of the Seattle Kraken skates during warm up before the game against the New Jersey Devils at the Prudential Center in Newark, N.J., on Jan. 14, 2026. (Rich Graessle/NHLI/Getty Images)

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“I’ll miss your voice, your advice, and the way you made everything feel a little less heavy. Some days will be harder than others, but I’ll hold on to the love, the lessons, and the memories you left me with. You’ll always be a part of me, in everything I do. Forever loved, forever missed. Until we meet again Cobs.” 

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Benfica fined for fans’ racism at Real Madrid game with UEFA investigation | Football News

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European football’s governing body fines Portuguese club Benfica for racist abuse by its fans in Champions League game.

Benfica has been fined by UEFA for racist abuse by fans at a Champions League game against Real Madrid, whose forward Vinicius Junior was allegedly racially abused by Benfica player Gianluca Prestianni in a separate incident.

UEFA’s investigation of Prestianni is ongoing, and the verdict on a different charge against Benfica for misconduct by fans at the February 17 game in Lisbon was published on Wednesday.

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Benfica was fined 40,000 euros ($46,000) for “illicit chants and gestures by two supporters”, UEFA said on Wednesday. The Portuguese club must serve a one-year probation period to avoid closing part of Lisbon’s Estadio da Luz (Stadium of Light) at a future European competition game.

Benfica previously suspended five fans who were under investigation for “inappropriate behaviour in the stands of a racist nature”.

Television images showed some fans making monkey gestures after Madrid’s 1-0 win in the first leg of the Champions League knockout playoffs round.

The game was stopped for nearly 10 minutes when Vinícius told the referee that Prestianni called him “monkey” after he scored and celebrated in front of Benfica fans.

Prestianni, who denied the allegation, pulled up his jersey to cover his mouth when the alleged insult was said.

The Argentina winger was suspended by UEFA from the second leg in Madrid while he was under investigation. He faces a 10-game ban from UEFA competition games.



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Man accused of trapping UCLA students in car now faces rape charges

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A 24-year-old man accused of trapping UCLA students in his car is now facing rape and other violent charges and police warn there may be more victims.

UCLA Police announced the arrest of Alexander Schecter, a Santa Monica resident who detectives say is linked to multiple crimes including sexual assault, kidnapping and extortion.

Schecter was taken into custody March 20 at his Santa Monica residence and booked into the Los Angeles County jail system. 

He faces felony counts including rape by force, forcible oral copulation, robbery, extortion and battery. 

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Mugshot of Alexander Schecter following his arrest by UCLA police in a kidnapping and sexual assault case

Alexander Schecter, a Santa Monica man accused of kidnapping and sexually assaulting victims in cases tied to the UCLA area, was arrested by UCLA police. Authorities say he is not affiliated with the university. (UCLA Police Department)

Bail was set at $600,000, but records show he has since been released.

The arrest stems from an early-morning incident near campus earlier this month.

According to investigators, on March 8 around 3 a.m., two female UCLA students were being dropped off when the suspect allegedly prevented them from exiting the vehicle and threatened violence.

LIFE-SENTENCED RAPIST WHO CALLED BREAK-IN ATTACK HIS ‘SUPER BOWL’ WINS EARLY RELEASE AFTER JUST A DECADE

steps on the UCLA campus

Janss Steps on the UCLA campus on Oct. 20, 2017. UCLA is a public university in the Los Angeles area. (MichaelGordon1/Getty Images)

Fearing for their safety, the victims remained inside as the suspect drove them roughly half a mile before stopping in the Gayley Avenue area.

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Detectives identified Schecter as the suspect and arrested him days later on kidnapping and false imprisonment charges. He was booked and later posted bail.

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Photo of UCLA campus of students walking on the grounds

A student walks on the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) campus in Los Angeles, Sept. 18, 2009. (REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson )

During the investigation, police said detectives uncovered evidence linking Schecter to a previously unreported sexual assault involving an adult woman with no known affiliation to UCLA.

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The assault occurred Oct. 12, 2025, in the area of Venice Boulevard and Clarington Avenue in Los Angeles, according to police, who said they later confirmed the attack and developed probable cause for the additional charges.

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Investigators say they believe there may be additional victims and are urging anyone with information to contact the UCLA Police Department.

Authorities said Schecter is not believed to be affiliated with the university.

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The case will be presented to the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office for filing consideration.

It was not immediately clear if Schechter has an attorney representing him.

Stepheny Price covers crime, including missing persons, homicides and migrant crime. Send story tips to stepheny.price@fox.com.



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Scammers have virtual smartphones on speed dial for fraud • The Register

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Smartphones have fast become the basis of our digital identities, securing payment systems and bank accounts. Now virtual devices that pretend to be real handsets have become a key tool for financial scammers, according to one company. 

Security vendor Group IB issued a report Wednesday into the misuse of ostensibly legitimate cloud phone platforms as tools for criminals to commit authorized push payment (APP) fraud. As with the social media abusers who came before them, fraudsters choose cloud phones because they appear to be totally legitimate devices if you don’t know how to examine their telemetry. 

Traditional banks of actual smartphones are expensive and cumbersome to maintain. SIM farms, meanwhile, make use of so much emulation software to run ARM software on non-ARM hardware that they’re easy to detect, as they don’t give off data characteristic of actual smartphones.

Cloud phones, which run in virtual mobile infrastructure environments, are essentially the best of all worlds. There’s no bank of phones to waste energy on or keep updated. Software running in their environments closely mimics phone behavior, including providing each virtual Android phone with a unique device ID, IP address, and spoofed geolocation. They can even incorporate fake sensor data to make it appear as if each device actually exists in the physical world. 

Platforms that offer such services market their stack as being for those who need to manage multiple social media accounts, resellers avoiding platform spam limits, or anyone, in the words of one platform, who needs “high-volume outreach where ‘stealth’ is a requirement, not a luxury.” 

In other words, yes, these are “legitimate” companies – just ones operating in a rather gray area when it comes to acceptable use policy compliance. 

Cloud phones: Great money mules

According to the report, cybercriminals are increasingly using cloud phones APP money transfers. APP fraud takes a number of forms, but all have one thing in common: Convincing victims to send money to a scammer. And analysts expect losses from the scam to rise.

“We estimate authorized push payment fraud losses in the United States could increase to $14.9 billion by 2028 from an estimated $8.3 billion in 2024,” Deloitte said in a report last October. 

For APP fraudsters, cloud phones make the perfect devices. Because the phones being emulated by cloud platforms appear entirely legitimate as far as financial institutions are currently concerned, fraudulent transfers of money from scam victims to attacker-controlled accounts, which are then forwarded on to scammers via cloud devices with banking apps installed, never trigger fraud alerts. 

“To the bank’s fraud detection system, it will appear to be the same device accessing the account that has always accessed it – same hardware fingerprint, same telemetry, same behavioral patterns,” Group-IB explained. 

According to their research, cybecrime forums increasingly feature cloud phones pre-configured with finance apps and account login details that have been “pre-warmed” with a few transactions so as to appear legitimate. They go for anywhere from $50 to $200 a piece. 

In many cases, the report noted, undiscovered cloud phone usage is “the critical missing link in many APP fraud cases.”

Time for finance to rethink security?

Group-IB said that it’s identified a couple of methods for identifying cloud phones. In both cases, unfortunately, spotting the stealthy devices might require a rethink of how financial institutions are security accounts. 

For example, many default apps installed on smartphones are missing from cloud devices, while special management applications are installed. There are also behavioral anomalies to keep an eye on, they noted, with cloud devices often showing constantly charged batteries and a lack of sensor motion during use sessions. 

Those types of device signals are often an afterthought for financial institutions, who have traditionally relied on knowledge-based authentication and fingerprinting via device IDs to ensure users are who they say they are. 

“The broader lesson is not that device fingerprinting has failed, it is that fraud detection must move beyond static device authenticity checks to multi-layered intelligence,” the report concluded, adding “device-environment correlation, infrastructure-level visibility, behavioral modeling, and graph-based analytics” as methods to catch some of the signals they highlighted.  ®



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