Security news aggregator

Latest coverage for Extradition

Stay updated on the latest extradition cases in cybersecurity. Discover how legal borders impact cybercrime and international information security.

1 headlines in this view

Refine the feed

Search across headline titles and summaries.

Tag briefing

Background for this topic.

Extradition is the formal process by which one country or jurisdiction asks another to surrender a person for prosecution or to serve a sentence. It is governed by treaties and domestic law, and is not automatic: authorities may assess whether the alleged conduct is a crime in both jurisdictions, whether evidence supports the request, and whether human-rights or political safeguards apply.

For information security, extradition matters when alleged hacking, unauthorized access, online fraud, or theft of data spans borders. A suspect’s location, the affected systems, and relevant logs may all fall under different legal authorities, so investigators must preserve evidence with reliable timestamps, chain of custody, and attention to privacy and data-transfer rules. Extradition is only one route; authorities may instead seek evidence through mutual legal assistance or pursue a case where the suspect is located. Security teams should therefore coordinate promptly with legal counsel and law enforcement, avoid treating threat-intelligence attribution alone as proof, and retain records in forms that can support proceedings across jurisdictions.

Showing 1 most recent headlines Filtered view
Krebs on Security 4 years, 4 months ago

Lawmakers Probe Early Release of Top RU Cybercrook

Aleksei Burkov, a cybercriminal who long operated two of Russia's most exclusive underground hacking forums, was arrested in 2015 by Israeli authorities. The Russian government fought Burkov's extradition to the U.S. for four years -- even arresting and jailing an Israeli woman to force a prisoner swap. That effort failed: Burkov was sent to America, pleaded guilty, and was sentenced to nine years in prison. But a little more than a year later, he was quietly released and deported back to Russia. Now some Republican lawmakers are asking why a Russian hacker once described as "an asset of supreme importance" was allowed to shorten his stay.