Trivy Security Scanner GitHub Actions Breached, 75 Tags Hijacked to Steal CI/CD Secrets

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Trivy, a popular open-source vulnerability scanner maintained by Aqua Security, was compromised a second time within the span of a month to deliver malware that stole sensitive CI/CD secrets.

The latest incident impacted GitHub Actions “aquasecurity/trivy-action” and “aquasecurity/setup-trivy,” which are used to scan Docker container images for vulnerabilities and set up GitHub Actions workflow with a specific version of the scanner, respectively.

“We identified that an attacker force-pushed 75 out of 76 version tags in the aquasecurity/trivy-action repository, the official GitHub Action for running Trivy vulnerability scans in CI/CD pipelines,” Socket security researcher Philipp Burckhardt said. “These tags were modified to serve a malicious payload, effectively turning trusted version references into a distribution mechanism for an infostealer.”

The payload executes within GitHub Actions runners and aims to extract valuable developer secrets from CI/CD environments, such as SSH keys, credentials for cloud service providers, databases, Git, Docker configurations, Kubernetes tokens, and cryptocurrency wallets.

The development marks the second supply chain incident involving Trivy. Towards the end of February and early March 2026, an autonomous bot called hackerbot-claw exploited a “pull_request_target” workflow to steal a Personal Access Token (PAT), which was then weaponized to seize control of the GitHub repository, delete several release versions, and push two malicious versions of its Visual Studio Code (VS Code) extension to Open VSX.

The first sign of the compromise was flagged by security researcher Paul McCarty after a new compromised release (version 0.69.4) was published to the “aquasecurity/trivy” GitHub repository. The rogue version has since been removed. According to Wiz, version 0.69.4 starts both the legitimate Trivy service and the malicious code responsible for a series of tasks –

  • Conduct data theft by scanning the system for environmental variables and credentials, encrypting the data, and exfiltrating it via an HTTP POST request to scan.aquasecurtiy[.]org.
  • Set up persistence by using a systemd service after confirming that it’s running on a developer machine. The systemd service is configured to run a Python script (“sysmon.py”) that polls an external server to retrieve the payload and execute it. 

In a statement, Itay Shakury, vice president of open source at Aqua Security, said the attackers abused a compromised credential to publish malicious trivy, trivy-action, and setup-trivy releases. In the case of “aquasecurity/trivy-action,” the adversary force-pushed 75 version tags to point to the malicious commits containing the Python infostealer payload without creating a new release or pushing to a branch, as is standard practice. Seven “aquasecurity/setup-trivy” tags were force-pushed in the same manner.

“So in this case, the attacker didn’t need to exploit Git itself,” Burckhardt told The Hacker News. “They had valid credentials with sufficient privileges to push code and rewrite tags, which is what enabled the tag poisoning we observed. What remains unclear is the exact credential used in this specific step (e.g., a maintainer PAT vs automation token), but the root cause is now understood to be credential compromise carried over from the earlier incident.”

The security vendor also acknowledged that the latest attack stemmed from incomplete containment of the hackerbot-claw incident. “We rotated secrets and tokens, but the process wasn’t atomic, and attackers may have been privy to refreshed tokens,” Shakury said. “We are now taking a more restrictive approach and locking down all automated actions and any token in order to thoroughly eliminate the problem.”

The stealer operates in three stages: harvesting environment variables from the runner process memory and the file system, encrypting the data, and exfiltrating it to the attacker-controlled server (“scan.aquasecurtiy[.]org”).

Should the exfiltration attempt fail, the victim’s own GitHub account is abused to stage the stolen data in a public repository named “tpcp-docs” by making use of the captured INPUT_GITHUB_PAT, an environment variable used in GitHub Actions to pass a GitHub PAT for authentication with the GitHub API.

It’s currently not known who is behind the attack, although there are signs that the threat actor known as TeamPCP may be behind it. This assessment is based on the fact that the credential harvester self-identifies as “TeamPCP Cloud stealer” in the source code. Also known as DeadCatx3, PCPcat, PersyPCP, ShellForce, and CipherForce, the group is known for acting as a cloud-native cybercrime platform designed to breach modern cloud infrastructure to facilitate data theft and extortion.

“The credential targets in this payload are consistent with the group’s broader cloud-native theft-and-monetization profile,” Socket said. “The heavy emphasis on Solana validator key pairs and cryptocurrency wallets is less well-documented as a TeamPCP hallmark, though it aligns with the group’s known financial motivations. The self-labeling could be a false flag, but the technical overlap with prior TeamPCP tooling makes genuine attribution plausible.”

Users are advised to ensure that they are using the latest safe releases –

“If you suspect you were running a compromised version, treat all pipeline secrets as compromised and rotate immediately,” Shakury said. Additional mitigation steps include blocking the exfiltration domain and the associated IP address (45.148.10[.]212) at the network level, and checking GitHub accounts for repositories named “tpcp-docs,” which may indicate successful exfiltration via the fallback mechanism.

“Pin GitHub Actions to full SHA hashes, not version tags,” Wiz researcher Rami McCarthy said. “Version tags can be moved to point at malicious commits, as demonstrated in this attack.”

(This is a developing story. Please check back for more details.)



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Trump administration seeks billions from Harvard over anti-Semitism claims | Donald Trump News

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The administration of United States President Donald Trump has filed a lawsuit against Harvard University, seeking billions of dollars in restitution for allegedly neglecting the civil rights of Jewish and Israeli students.

The Department of Justice announced the lawsuit on Friday, stating that the university “allowed anti-semitism to flourish” amid uproar over Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza.

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The university’s policies, according to the complaint, “sent the clear message to Harvard’s Jewish and Israeli community that the indifference was not an accident; they were being intentionally excluded and effectively denied equal access to educational opportunities.”

Harvard quickly rejected the lawsuit’s allegations, saying it was “yet another pretextual and retaliatory action” from the Trump administration.

Trump has been in a long-standing feud with Harvard since returning to office for a second term as president in 2025.

In statement, Harvard pointed out that it has taken steps to address anti-Semitism on campus, including through new training and disciplinary processes.

“Harvard cares deeply about members of our Jewish and Israeli community and remains committed to ensuring they are embraced, respected, and can thrive on our campus,” a spokesperson for the university said.

“Harvard’s efforts demonstrate the very opposite of deliberate indifference.”

It is unclear the exact amount in damages the Trump administration is seeking from Harvard, the oldest university still in operation in the US.

But Friday’s lawsuit points to nearly $2.6bn in federal grants awarded to the university from the Department of Health and Human Services.

The lawsuit suggests the Trump administration is seeking to recoup all federal grants issued to Harvard since October 2023, when student protests erupted against the war in Gaza.

The lawsuit will be litigated before the court of US District Judge Richard Stearns, who was appointed under President Bill Clinton.

A pressure campaign against universities

Since the start of his second term, Trump has frequently used the pretext of combatting anti-Semitism to demand greater control over US universities, which he depicts as hotbeds of discrimination.

He campaigned for re-election in part on pledges to address the widespread Palestinian solidarity protests on US campuses, and within months of taking office, he had suspended $400m in federal grants to Columbia University, one of the schools closely associated with the protest movement.

The Trump administration then issued a list of demands to Columbia, which included banning face masks, placing one academic department under the supervision of a “receivership” and allowing outside law enforcement to arrest “agitators”.

On March 22, 2025, Columbia struck a deal with the administration. Later that year, in July, it agreed to pay nearly $220m in penalties.

The aggressive manouevring against Columbia became the template for Trump’s pressure campaigns against other top US schools, including Brown, Harvard and the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).

It also coincided with a push to arrest and deport foreign students involved in pro-Palestinian activism, including Columbia student Mahmoud Khalil and Tufts student Rumeysa Ozturk.

The government has reportedly worked with pro-Israel groups such as Canary Mission and Betar US that monitor student activists and pass along their names to federal authorities.

Federal Judge William Young ruled in September that the Trump administration had violated the right to free speech rights by seeking to deport pro-Palestine students and scholars.

Young wrote that the Trump administration’s effort effectively “intimidate and silence anyone who dares oppose them”.

In April last year, the Trump administration issued a list of demands to Harvard, but it has yet to agree with the government’s terms.

In the interim, the Trump administration has attempted to bar Harvard from enrolling foreign students and has attempted to freeze the school’s federal funds.

A US district judge ruled in September that the Trump administration had illegally slashed more than $2bn in research grants to Harvard.

Still, just last month, Trump suggested he would be seeking $1bn in damages from Harvard in a post on Truth Social.

The Trump administration also sought a $1bn settlement from UCLA in August. The DOJ announced a lawsuit against UCLA in February.



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Val Kilmer resurrected with AI for new film; fans react with outrage

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Fans are reacting strongly to the news of Val Kilmer returning to the screen without ever stepping on the set.

An artificial intelligence version of the actor, who died last year, will star in the new independent film “As Deep as the Grave.” Kilmer was cast in the role of Father Fintan before his death but wasn’t able to do any filming because of his battle with throat cancer. And, for many, the announcement isn’t good news.

“He was the actor I wanted to play this role,” writer and director Coerte Voorhees told Variety this week. “It was very much designed around him. It drew on his Native American heritage and his ties to and love of the Southwest. 

“I was looking at a call sheet the other day, and we had him ready to shoot. He was just going through a really, really tough time medically, and he couldn’t do it.”

MORGAN FREEMAN THREATENS LEGAL ACTION OVER AI USE OF HIS VOICE, SAYS HE’S ‘A LITTLE PO’D’

Val Kilmer

An AI likeness of Val Kilmer will appear in an upcoming film. (Associated Press)

Many fans had negative reactions to the news.

“Did he say he was cool with this kinda thing before he died? If not, probably a gross thing to do,” one person wrote on X. 

Another said if it was just a “quick cameo” like Paul Walker in “Furious 7” after his death, that would be “fine,” but “if it’s an actual role with speaking parts, then what is the actual use of acting?”

A third commenter wrote, “In Hollywood, when you die, they resurrect you with AI and force you to keep working.”

ACTOR GEORGE CLOONEY CLAIMS THE RISE OF AI TECHNOLOGY IS DANGEROUS, SAYS ‘GENIE IS OUT OF THE BOTTLE’

“I do not care how much permission they had to do this, no one should be allowed to do this,” a fourth said. “It should be illegal to resurrect the visage of dead people with genAI imo.”

Someone else wrote, “No amount of moral dressing is going to change how sick and greedy this is. the family should be ashamed tbh.”

“This is difficult,” another person posted. “If Val wanted this, and desired to go with ‘one final hurray’, maybe it is acceptable. (When Oliver Reed died during Gladiator, they used a body double + light CGI to finish his scenes) But, when this becomes the norm…”

Val Kilmer

Some of Kilmer’s fans were upset at the idea of the film, while others were more supportive. (AP Images)

Still, some fans were supportive of the idea.

“Was about to come sh** on this, but apparently he and his daughter were close. would be nice to see someone you’ve lost on the big screen, though I wonder if it’ll feel like the real Kilmer,” one person wrote.

“People are going to disagree, but as long as he himself wanted it and his own family gave the greenlight, everyone else should shut up,” another said.

Voorhees said the AI version of Kilmer’s character was made with the support of his estate and family, who were compensated.

“His family kept saying how important they thought the movie was and that Val really wanted to be a part of this,” Voorhees shared. “He really thought it was an important story that he wanted his name on. It was that support that gave me the confidence to say, ‘OK, let’s do this.’ Despite the fact some people might call it controversial, this is what Val wanted.”

The AI version of Kilmer was created using images of the actor when he was younger, film of him in his last years and his voice.

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Val Kilmer's son and daughter

Kilmer’s son and daughter, Jack and Mercedes, at the Cannes Film Festival. (Lionel Hahn/Getty Images)

Kilmer will appear in a “significant part” of the film, which also stars Abigail Lawrie, Tom Felton, Wes Studi and Abigail Breslin.

“It was very unfortunate that his health at the time prevented him from playing this role which spoke to him spiritually and culturally,” Voorhees said, according to The Associated Press. “We are honored to collaborate with his daughter Mercedes, who brings her own filmmaking experience, to bring this character to life in the way that we had all originally imagined it.”

JAMES WOODS WARNS AI COULD BE THE ‘END OF HUMAN ACTORS’ IN HOLLYWOOD

On the IMDb page for the film, Kilmer’s role is credited to a “digital performer,” specifying that it is an “AI performance as Val Kilmer.”

“As Deep as the Grave” is based on a true story about two archaeologists’ excavations in Arizona’s Canyon of the Dead.

Val Kilmer's in memorium

An image of Val Kilmer during the “In Memoriam” tribute during the 32nd Annual Actor Awards March 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)

Voorhees said that, at one point, scenes involving Kilmer’s character were cut for budget reasons, but they later realized Father Fintan was a “major missing element.”

“Normally, we would just recast an actor,” he said. “I’m all about working with our actors, and we have brilliant performances all throughout this movie. But we can’t roll camera again. We don’t have the budget. We’re not a big studio film. So, we had to think of innovative ways to do it. And we realized the technology is there for us.”

Despite the controversies surrounding the use of AI in film, Kilmer’s daughter, Mercedes Kilmer, said she believes her father would have been supportive of it in this case.

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“He always looked at emerging technologies with optimism as a tool to expand the possibilities of storytelling,” she said in a statement. “This spirit is something that we are all honoring within this specific film, of which he was an integral part.”

Voorhees stressed that he also followed SAG-AFTRA’s regulations for the use of AI in film.

Val Kilmer wears suit and tie on the red carpet.

Kilmer died of pneumonia in April 2025. (Mark Mainz)

“Consent not obtained before death must be obtained from an authorized representative or the union,” the rules state.

Voorhees and his brother, producer John Voorhees, told The Associated Press, “We believe we are serving as a demonstrator for how to do it ethically and correctly, especially in the case of working with a deceased actor’s estate and family.”

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Kilmer’s voice was also digitally altered for his role in 2022’s “Top Gun: Maverick” after his tracheotomies.

Kilmer died at age 65 last April of pneumonia after his cancer battle.

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 



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Iran: From Khamenei to Khamenei | US-Israel war on Iran

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How Iran’s power structure was built, and how it survives its architect.

After a US-Israeli strike killed Iran’s Ali Khamenei, the war on Iran escalates, and the Islamic Republic faces a critical moment. Mojtaba Khamenei has been elected supreme leader, marking a rare and controversial succession. This explainer breaks down how Iran’s power structure was built after the 1979 Islamic revolution led by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, and how Ali Khamenei transformed that revolution into a complex political and security structure.

We examine how the supreme leader sits above all institutions in Iran, shaping decisions across government, the military, and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, and how this system is designed to endure beyond any single leader. As Mojtaba Khamenei takes power, questions grow over how Iran will be governed, how the IRGC will influence decision-making, and whether the system Ali Khamenei built can withstand both internal pressure and external conflict.

From Ali Khamenei to Mojtaba Khamenei, this is the story of Iran’s supreme leader, the system behind power in Iran, and what comes next.



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Investigators probe suspicious activity near Nancy Guthrie’s home

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Investigators on the Nancy Guthrie task force are looking into reports of suspicious activity around her neighborhood, the Pima County Sheriff’s Department told Fox News Digital Friday.

Guthrie is the mother of “Today” co-host Savannah Guthrie, who has assumed a low profile as the investigation stretches on with few publicly available answers.

When asked about recent reports of suspicious activity at a recently vacant home nearby, a spokesperson declined to confirm whether the investigation involved any specific person or people.

“I can tell you that investigators are looking into reports of anything suspicious in that area,” she said.

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Nancy Guthrie and Savannah Guthrie posing together for a photo.

An undated photo of Nancy Guthrie and Savannah Guthrie provided by NBC in response to the disappearance of the 84-year-old mother of the Today Show host. (Courtesy of NBC)

Separately, DNA analysis is still underway more than 47 days after the 84-year-old’s suspected abduction from her home in the Catalina Foothills, an upscale suburb north of Tucson, on Feb. 1.

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While authorities said they’ve obtained additional images from Guthrie’s home security camera system, they have no new images of the suspect, the spokesperson said. Efforts to recover more video are ongoing.

Savannah Guthrie and Nancy Guthrie

Nancy Guthrie, 84, has been missing from her Arizona home since Jan. 31, 2026.  (Don Arnold/WireImage/Getty Images)

And authorities have also not been able to confirm whether the masked man at Guthrie’s front door acted alone.

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PCSD also downplayed recent reports that investigators had recovered video from Guthrie’s last known Uber ride, which she took from her home out to dinner around 5 p.m. on Jan. 31.

“I have not been advised of additional video identified in this investigation,” the spokesperson told Fox News Digital. “The sheriff said early on in the investigation that investigators had interviewed the Uber driver and they had not been considered suspects or persons of interest in this case.”

The Guthrie family lays flowers at Nancy Guthrie's home

Annie Guthrie, her husband Tommaso Cioni, and Savannah Guthrie at their missing mother Nancy Guthrie’s home on Monday, March 2, in Tucson, Arizona. (Fox News)

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Guthrie is believed to have been taken against her will, according to Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos.

Her son-in-law dropped her off at home around 10 p.m. the night before she went missing. In the early morning hours, a masked man appeared on her doorstep.

A view from a doorbell camera showing an armed individual outside the residence of Nancy Guthrie in Tucson, Arizona

Photos released on Feb. 10, 2025, show a “subject” on Nancy Guthrie’s property.  (Provided by FBI)

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At around 2:30 a.m., her pacemaker made its last sync with her Apple devices, indicating a potential timeframe of when she was taken out of the home. Her watch and iPhone were recovered inside.

However, authorities have been unable to catch a suspect or find her so far.

A Pima County Sheriff's deputy reaching into a mailbox to retrieve mail at Nancy Guthrie's home.

A Pima County Sheriff’s deputy retrieves the mail from the Guthrie mailbox outside Nancy Guthrie’s home in Catalina Foothills, on Feb. 11, 2026. (Patrick Breen/The Republic / USA Today Network via Imagn Images)

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Anyone with information is asked to dial 1-800-CALL-FBI.

There is a combined reward of more than $1.2 million for information that helps crack the case.



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Salesforce acquihires team behind Clockwise for Agentforce • The Register

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Salesforce’s Agentforce team is getting an infusion of new talent by hiring the team behind Clockwise, a calendar scheduling app, but the app itself isn’t sticking around.

“We will be bringing our deep expertise building reliable, agentic software to the Agentic Enterprise,” Clockwise CEO and cofounder Matt Martin aid in a LinkedIn post. “Now for the sad part: as part of this transition, the Clockwise services will be going away.”

Clockwise said that, as of March 27, it will no longer be available.

In a statement to The Register, Salesforce said it was not buying Clockwise or its technology.

“I want to clarify that this was not an acquisition,” a spokesperson said in an email. “Salesforce is not acquiring Clockwise or its technology. We look forward to welcoming members of the Clockwise team to Salesforce, where they will join the Agentforce team.”

It appears that the Clockwise team will be joining a Salesforce organization led by Gary Lerhaupt, who along with Martin cofounded Clockwise. Martin also previously worked for Salesforce as a software engineer between 2014 and 2016 before leaving to cofound Clockwise in 2016.

The Register has reached out to Martin and Lerhaupt directly on LinkedIn but neither has responded.

Lerhaupt left Clockwise last year and, in a comment on his farewell post, stated that he was going “into the great wide open,” which turned out to be a desk at Salesforce HQ, where he is vice president of product architecture for Agentforce.

Lerhaupt posted a welcome message to his new colleagues on LinkedIn.

“In a twist maybe only Silicon Valley could write, this crew is joining Salesforce,” he said of Clockwise’s employees. “More specifically, they’re joining my charter to build Agent Interoperability and Orchestration within Agentforce. I couldn’t be more excited to build the future of AI alongside them again!”

Martin is also apparently joining that team as well, with one Salesforce engineer telling him “Welcome back to the Mothership – see you at onboarding” on LinkedIn and Martin replying “See you soon!”

As for the Clockwise product, it is recommending users transfer to rival scheduler Reclaim, as the Clockwise product and services will soon disappear and all data is being deleted. Clockwise said Reclaim is offering price matching for all migrating Clockwise customers.

On Clockwise’ FAQ page, it said Salesforce will not have access to users’ data.

The company is working on refunding customers who have prepaid for services past March 27.

“Smart Hold events created by Clockwise (such as Focus Time, Travel Time, Meeting Breaks, and Personal Calendar synced events) will be removed from your calendar. Flexible Meetings will stop moving and the green Clockwise sparkle will be removed.” ®



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Explosion hits Jerusalem’s Old City after Iran missile alert | Drone Strikes

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An explosion struck Jerusalem’s Old City seconds after sirens warned of an incoming Iranian missile. Smoke was seen rising at the site as Iran launched multiple attacks, sending millions into shelters. Several were lightly wounded, Israeli authorities said.



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US military strikes narco-trafficking vessel in Eastern Pacific, 3 survive

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U.S. forces carried out a lethal strike on a vessel allegedly tied to designated terrorist organizations in the Eastern Pacific, targeting what officials say was an active narco-trafficking operation, U.S. Southern Command (USSOUTHCOM) confirmed.

SOUTHCOM Cmdr. Gen. Francis L. Donovan ordered the strike by Joint Task Force Southern Spear after intelligence confirmed the low-profile vessel was transiting along known narco-trafficking routes in the Eastern Pacific.

It was also allegedly engaged in narco-trafficking operations

Low-profile vessels, often called “narco subs,” are designed to evade detection and are often used to move drugs from South America to Central America or Mexico.

US FORCES STRIKE VESSEL ALLEGEDLY TIED TO NARCO-TERROR GROUP KILLING 2 AS CREWS SEARCH FOR LONE SURVIVOR

Boat traveling in sea

Video showed the boat traveling before the strike. (U.S. Southern Command)

Three suspected narco-terrorists survived the strike, and USSOUTHCOM said it immediately notified the U.S. Coast Guard to activate the search and rescue system for the survivors. 

It is unclear how many people died in the attack. No U.S. military forces were harmed, according to officials.

Boat during strike

Video showed a bright flash during the kinetic strike. (U.S. Southern Command)

US FORCES KILL TWO SUSPECTED NARCO-TERRORISTS IN EASTERN PACIFIC LETHAL STRIKE OPERATION

The strike comes weeks after the Pentagon carried out a lethal strike on a vessel allegedly carrying suspected narco-traffickers in the Eastern Pacific, killing six people on board.

The March 8 strike was also ordered by Donovan, who took over SOUTHCOM in January.

Six men on the ship were killed, but no U.S. forces died in the attack.

Boat after strike

Video showed the boat after the strike. (U.S. Southern Command)

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At least 156 people have been killed in alleged drug smuggling ship strikes ordered by the Trump administration, according to The New York Times.

Fox News Digital’s Landon Mion contributed to this report.



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Trio sentenced for facilitating North Korean IT worker scheme from their homes

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Three American men were sentenced Friday for crimes they committed in furtherance of North Korea’s vast scheme to get operatives hired at U.S. companies, the Justice Department said.

The trio — Audricus Phagnasay, 25, Jason Salazar, 30, and Alexander Paul Travis, 35 — pleaded guilty in November to wire fraud conspiracy for providing U.S. identities to remote North Korean IT workers.

They hosted U.S. company-provided laptops at their homes and installed remote-access software so North Korean operatives could appear to be working in the country. The group also helped remote IT workers pass employer vetting and, in the case of Travis and Salazar, took drug tests on behalf of the North Koreans, prosecutors said.

Travis, an active-duty member of the U.S. Army at the time, received about $51,000 from the scheme. He was sentenced to one year in prison and ordered to forfeit about $193,000.

Phagnasay and Salazar each pocketed about $3,500 and $4,500, respectively, and were both sentenced to three years of probation and a $2,000 fine.  A federal court ordered Salazar to forfeit about $410,000 and ordered Phagnasay to forfeit nearly $682,000.

“These men practically gave the keys to the online kingdom to likely North Korean overseas technology workers seeking to raise illicit revenue for the North Korean government — all in return for what to them seemed like easy money,” Margaret Heap, U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Georgia, said in a statement. 

“These schemes present a significant challenge to our national security, and we applaud our investigative partners working to secure our digital borders,” Heap added.

The trio facilitated about $1.28 million in salary from victim U.S. companies from September 2019 through November 2022. Yet, the financial cuts for their assistance was relatively low.

Officials’ countermeasures to these schemes, which ultimately launder ill-gotten money to North Korea’s government, involve the targeting of U.S.-based facilitators who provide forged or stolen identities and laptop farms for North Korean operatives, and the seizure of cryptocurrency linked to theft. 

Law enforcement wins on both fronts are stacking up, but researchers warn that North Korea’s operation is massive in scale and consistently evolving.

Microsoft Threat Intelligence earlier this month warned that North Korean threat groups are using artificial intelligence tools to accelerate and expand the country’s scheme – automating and improving efforts across the attack lifecycle.

Matt Kapko

Written by Matt Kapko

Matt Kapko is a reporter at CyberScoop. His beat includes cybercrime, ransomware, software defects and vulnerability (mis)management. The lifelong Californian started his journalism career in 2001 with previous stops at Cybersecurity Dive, CIO, SDxCentral and RCR Wireless News. Matt has a degree in journalism and history from Humboldt State University.



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