Europol has taken down a vast international cybercrime network responsible for orchestrating large-scale phishing, fraud, and identity theft operations through mobile network systems. The coordinated crackdown, codenamed “SIMCARTEL,” led to multiple arrests and the seizure of a massive infrastructure used to fuel telecom-based criminal activity across more than 80 countries.
Investigators from Austria, Estonia, and Latvia spearheaded the probe, linking the criminal network to over 3,200 cases of fraud, including fake investment scams and emergency call frauds designed for quick financial gain. The financial toll of the operation reached approximately $5.3 million in Austria and $490,000 in Latvia, highlighting the global scale of the scheme.
The coordinated action, conducted primarily on October 10 in Latvia, resulted in the arrest of seven suspects and the seizure of 1,200 SIM box devices loaded with nearly 40,000 active SIM cards. Authorities also discovered hundreds of thousands of unused SIM cards, along with five servers, two websites, and several luxury vehicles. Around $833,000 in funds across bank and cryptocurrency accounts were also frozen during the operation.
According to Europol, the infrastructure was designed to mask the true identities and locations of perpetrators, allowing them to create fake social media and communication accounts for cybercrimes. “The network enabled criminals to establish fraudulent online profiles
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