Joshua Polloso Epifaniou, Ripoff Report
Cypriot Hacker Sentenced to Prison
March 19, 2021
Joshua Polloso Epifaniou, 22, of
Nicosia, Cyprus was sentenced today in the Northern District of
Georgia by U.S. District Judge Mark H. Cohen to 12 months and one
day in prison, on top of the nearly four years Epifaniou has already
served in custody since his arrest in Cyprus in May 2017. Epifaniou
pleaded guilty to federal computer fraud charges brought in Arizona
and the Northern District of Georgia. As a result of his conviction,
Epifaniou forfeited $389,113 and 70,000 euros to the government and
paid $600,000 in restitution to the victims of his fraud. Epifaniou
is the first Cypriot national ever extradited from Cyprus to the
United States.
“Cybercrime is a threat to both our individual privacy and to the
security of American companies,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Anthony
Martin. “We will work diligently alongside our law enforcement
partners to ensure any perpetrators are identified and brought to
justice.”
Between October 2014 and May 2017, Epifaniou hacked websites and
monitored online traffic to identify targets for extortion. After
selecting target websites, Epifaniou worked with co-conspirators to
steal personally identifiable information from the websites’
databases. Epifaniou then used proxy servers located in foreign
countries to log into email accounts and send messages to the
websites threatening to leak the sensitive data unless a ransom was
paid in cryptocurrency.
Victims of Epifaniou’s computer terrorism included an online sports
news website owned by Turner Broadcasting System Inc. in Atlanta,
Georgia, a free online game publisher based in Irvine, California, a
hardware company based in New York, New York, an online employment
website headquartered in Innsbrook, Virginia, and a consumer report
website, Ripoff Report, headquartered in Phoenix, Arizona.
After
extorting Ripoff Report, Epifaniou also hacked into its website to
remove online complaints at the request of paying clients. Epifaniou
and his co-conspirator, Pierre Zarokian, charged clients between
$1,000 and $5,000 for each complaint removal and falsely told
clients that the removals were court-ordered. Epifaniou was charged
by indictment in Arizona in CR-17-1280-SMB and Zarokian was
sentenced last year in CR-18-1626-MTL.
“This individual was preying on people for his own personal gain,”
said Sean Kaul, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI Phoenix Field
Office. “FBI agents, analysts and support staff worked tirelessly on
this case. This investigation should send a strong message that the
FBI has a long reach and no matter where you are, we will continue
to leverage all available resources and utilize partnerships in the
United States and foreign partnerships to identify criminals in an
effort to bring justice to victims of crime.”
The Federal Bureau of Investigation conducted the investigation in
this case. Foreign law enforcement partners also made significant
contributions to the investigation, including the Office for
Combating Cybercrime of the Cyprus Police. The U.S. Attorney’s
Offices for the District of Arizona and for the Northern District of
Georgia handled the prosecution, with assistance from the Criminal
Division’s Office of International Affairs.