Mars Finance News reports that, according to market sources, TRM Labs has tracked on-chain the stolen crypto assets from the 2022 LastPass vulnerability incident. On-chain signs indicate the involvement of a Russian cybercriminal group in money laundering. TRM stated that although hackers used mixing tools like CoinJoin, through de-mixing and behavioral continuity analysis, the funds before and after are still linked to the same group of attackers. The related funds ultimately flowed into high-risk Russian exchanges Cryptex and Audi6, with the total involved amount estimated to exceed $28 million.
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TRM Labs: LastPass stolen assets point to Russian criminal groups, who launder money using mixing tools
Mars Finance News reports that, according to market sources, TRM Labs has tracked on-chain the stolen crypto assets from the 2022 LastPass vulnerability incident. On-chain signs indicate the involvement of a Russian cybercriminal group in money laundering. TRM stated that although hackers used mixing tools like CoinJoin, through de-mixing and behavioral continuity analysis, the funds before and after are still linked to the same group of attackers. The related funds ultimately flowed into high-risk Russian exchanges Cryptex and Audi6, with the total involved amount estimated to exceed $28 million.