VoIP Service Provider Accused Of Stealing Calls Print E-mail
Written by Adam Gosling   
Thursday, 08 June 2006
An American VoIP Service Provider stands accused of stealing PSTN connections in a scam that netted more than a US$1million from an investment of US$20,000 in hacking charges.


According to a report by the Seattle Post-Inteligencer, investigators allege the 23 year old Venezuelan man, now a resident in Miami cheated VoIP service providers of interconnect fees for hundreds of thousands of IP-based telephone calls.

It is alleged he paid a professional hacker to penetrate the networks of other VoIP Service Providers some of which lost up to US$300,000. Edwin Andres Pena was able to keep in excess of US$1 million in fees collected from his customers as he didn't have to pay the 15 other providers for the calls made.

Prosecutors allege that the scam routed some half a million IP-based phone calls through one service provider alone. That particular service provider was identified in the court documents only as "N.T.P.," suggesting that the victim may be Net2Phone, the company currently suing Skype for Patent Infringement. Neither Net2Phone nor its parent company IDT Corp., were available for comment.

Pena was making so much money he was forced to spend up large to hide his illegal profits adding several pieces of real estate, three luxury cars and a 40-foot motor boat to his portfolio. Federal agents reportedly confiscated a customized 2004 BMW M3 form the acused.

Pena set himself up as a wholes VoIP service provider using two companies which sold more than 10 million minutes of Internet telephone service at discounted rates as low as US$0.4 cents a minute.

But rather than pay for those calls to be routed through legitimate channels, Pena paid the hacker to locate vulnerable ports at unsuspecting non-phone companies around the world by sending more than 6 million scans over four months in 2005.

Once this network was established, the scammers used "brute force" attacks to identify the codes used by the providers to determine if the calls from the unsuspecting intermediaries were authorised on their network.

This was done simply by sending countless test calls to see which codes were accepted. The intermediaries were then programmed to use the reverse engineered codes to route the calls of his customers. Or so the allegation goes.

If Pena is found guilty of wire fraud he could face up to 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. The computer hacking penalty is up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

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