Man stole $122m from Facebook and Google by sending them random bills, which the companies dutifully paid

Oct 25, 2017
24,297
https://boingboing.net/2019/03/24/e...729-OOgUQLPkdJyOGNtJYtq5eOEZqEPE_Fkp_gp8FsmnU

Last week, Evaldas Rimasauskas of Lithuania plead guilty to US wire fraud, aggravated identity theft, and money laundering charges, admitting that he had stolen $99m from Facebook and $23m from Google between 2013 and 2015.


Rimasauskas's grift was pretty bold. He merely sent Google and Facebook invoices for items they hadn't purchased and that he hadn't provided, which the companies paid anyway. The invoices were accompanied by "forged invoices, contracts, and letters that falsely appeared to have been executed and signed by executives and agents of the Victim Companies, and which bore false corporate stamps embossed with the Victim Companies’ names, to be submitted to banks in support of the large volume of funds that were fraudulently transmitted via wire transfer." He also spoofed emails that appeared to come from corporate execs.

Apparently, no one checked first to see if these corresponded to invoices/POs that had been issued within the companies.

Rimasauskas was pretending to be the giant Taiwanese hardware manufacturer Quanta Computer Inc, and had registered a company in Latvia with the same name.

He's agreed to forfeit about $50m. It's not clear what's happened to the other $73m, but Rimasauskas was a prolific and baroque money-launderer who squirreled cash away in Cyprus, Lithuania, Hungary, Slovakia, and Latvia. Google has said that "We detected this fraud and promptly alerted the authorities. We recouped the funds and we're pleased this matter is resolved."

Rimasauskas will be sentenced on July 29. He faces up to 30 years.

 

Raide

Member
Oct 31, 2017
13,469
I cannot believe that nobody checked that amount of money. a few thousand, fair enough but how the hell did it get to multi-millions without someone checking.
 

-shadow-

One Winged Slayer
Member
Oct 25, 2017
5,642
Imagine if he stopped before he got caught with it. That would've been amazing.
 
Oct 29, 2017
4,941
After seeing what bill payment practices look like at a couple of big corporations I've worked at, I have no problem believing this, and I bet it happens a lot more often than anyone is aware of.
 

gutshot

Member
Oct 25, 2017
3,619
Italy
I cannot believe that nobody checked that amount of money. a few thousand, fair enough but how the hell did it get to multi-millions without someone checking.
Facebook's total revenue last year was $55 billion(!), Google's was $100 billion(!!!).

$122 million over the span of two years is basically a few thousand to these companies.
 

PeskyToaster

Member
Oct 27, 2017
10,799
flew too close to the sun my dude, I have a feeling he would've been home free if he went for a few mill.
 

Almighty

Member
Oct 25, 2017
3,573
Based on the title I was assuming it was some half-assed effort but that fucker went all out.
 

The Albatross

Member
Oct 25, 2017
22,682
He ran a pretty good fraud, NYT goes into description here:

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/25/business/facebook-google-wire-fraud.html

From 2013 through 2015, RIMASAUSKAS orchestrated a fraudulent scheme designed to deceive the Victim Companies, including a multinational technology company and a multinational online social media company, into wiring funds to bank accounts controlled by RIMASAUSKAS. Specifically, RIMASAUSKAS registered and incorporated a company in Latvia (“Company-2”) that bore the same name as an Asian-based computer hardware manufacturer (“Company-1”), and opened, maintained, and controlled various accounts at banks located in Latvia and Cyprus in the name of Company-2. Thereafter, fraudulent phishing emails were sent to employees and agents of the Victim Companies, which regularly conducted multimillion-dollar transactions with Company-1, directing that money the Victim Companies owed Company-1 for legitimate goods and services be sent to Company-2’s bank accounts in Latvia and Cyprus, which were controlled by RIMASAUSKAS. These emails purported to be from employees and agents of Company-1, and were sent from email accounts that were designed to create the false appearance that they were sent by employees and agents of Company-1, but in truth and in fact, were neither sent nor authorized by Company-1. This scheme succeeded in deceiving the Victim Companies into complying with the fraudulent wiring instructions.
(From the SDNY filing)

He ran a pretty good scheme. He didn't just send bogus emails from his gmail or something, but registered and incorporated a (fake) company in Latvia that's the same name as a company in China, used phishing emails to get employee data from the other company and spoof their invoices/emails, and then ran phishing schemes to get data from Google & Facebook to send those fraudulent emails/invoices to the victim companies. It is kinda "guy sent fake emails asking for money," but... a bit more complex than that, as he actually registered a fraudulent business, opened bank accounts around the world, and laundered hundreds of millions of dollars through them. He also had charges of identity theft and other money laundering charges that were dropped for the guilty plead.

His defense is that he's just one piece of a larger fraud organization scamming people, but his guilty plead was just for this fraud. If he can lead to more prosecutions, then I doubt he'll get the max sentence. The max sentence hangs over him as a potential carrot and stick to help prosecutors.

I'm surprised, but I guess I shouldn't be, that people think a possible sentence of 30 years is excessive for someone who has stolen $100m+. I hate Facebook as much as anybody, but this guy's not your hero
 
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Deleted member 16365

User requested account closure
Banned
Oct 27, 2017
4,127
He got greedy. If he would have stopped and disappeared after it worked the first time he wouldn't be going to jail.
 

Landy828

Banned
Oct 26, 2017
9,424
Clemson, SC
This guy just made stuff up and got away with it (for a while).

I've considered billing companies for my time before, when they held me up or made me wait for something. Just to see if they pay the bills, haha.

Acting like you sold something, faking paperwork, faking emails and getting away with it this long, is incredible.
 

Titik

Member
Oct 25, 2017
7,489
I've always wondered if people really paid attention to these things. Like no one checks my ID at many places I do contract work for. I just say my name and then they pretty much just show me the door of where in working at without a blink of an eye.
 

itwasTuesday

The Fallen
Oct 30, 2017
8,078
When 7 figure bills become common place.

I also want a movie out of this. Or at least a Netflix doc.
 

Bonefish

Member
Oct 28, 2017
4,060
Everyone praising this guy are you even considering what this money was being used for, especially if Monday laundering was involved....