Scottish man pleads guilty in $8m crypto hacking conspiracy targeting US firms

594     0
Scottish man pleads guilty in $8m crypto hacking conspiracy targeting US firms
Scottish man pleads guilty in $8m crypto hacking conspiracy targeting US firms

A Scottish man has pleaded guilty to plotting to hack into the computer systems of at least a dozen companies to steal at least eight million dollars (£5.9 million) in virtual currency from victims in the United States.

The US Department of Justice (DOJ) said Tyler Buchanan, 24, of Dundee, was involved in a group that used text message phishing attacks to trick employees into disclosing their login credentials, enabling access to computer systems.

Buchanan pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and one count of aggravated identity theft.

US officials said he and his co-conspirators sent hundreds of messages to company employees, posing as the companies or their contracted suppliers.

In his plea agreement, the 24-year-old admitted that between September 2021 and April 2023, the group planned to scam telecommunications companies, IT suppliers, cloud communications providers, virtual currency firms, and individuals.

A device seized at Buchanan’s home in Scotland showed he possessed the names and addresses of multiple victims, as well as a text file containing cryptocurrency seed phrases and login credentials for one victim’s account.

“The conspirators created a phishing kit that captured login credentials entered into the fraudulent phishing websites by a victim company’s employees,” the DOJ said in a statement.

“The stolen credentials were then transmitted to an online Telegram channel administered by Buchanan and another co-conspirator.”

Buchanan has been in US federal custody since April 2025.

He is scheduled to be sentenced on August 21 and faces a maximum sentence of 22 years in prison.

Three other defendants, all from the United States, are still facing criminal charges, according to the DOJ.

Another co-conspirator, Noah Michael Urban, pleaded guilty in April 2025 to three fraud-related charges and is serving a 10-year prison sentence.

Urban was also ordered to pay 13 million dollars (£9.6 million) in restitution.

The DOJ said Police Scotland was one of several agencies providing the FBI with assistance as they carried out the investigation.

Editorial Team

James Smith

Editor-in-Chief

Tyler Buchanan, United States, Dundee, Identity Theft, Police Scotland, Cryptocurrency

Read more similar news:

05.02.2023, 18:19 • News
Crypto traders with 'hundreds of thousands' on line seek rehab help for habit
07.02.2023, 13:23 • Finance
'Digital pound' could be launched by the Bank of England - what we know so far
20.02.2023, 17:40 • News
Crypto queen on FBI's Wost Wanted list for £3billion scam 'killed on yacht'
27.02.2023, 19:53 • Crime
Man charged after cryptocurrency mining operation found in school crawl space
12.01.2023, 08:46 • News
Get-rich-quick crank Simon Stepsys prosecuted for cheating the taxman
08.03.2023, 09:00 • Sport
Footballers' NFTs now worthless from Terry's apes to Pogba's dragons
15.03.2023, 18:13 • Sport
Nottingham Forest star returns to homeland after losing £1m to cryptocurrency
24.03.2023, 11:53 • More
Take this quiz to discover how good your financial knowledge really is
27.03.2023, 17:56 • Crime
'Crypto king' kidnapped and tortured by angry investors after 'scamming them'
07.06.2023, 16:00 • Crime
'I went undercover in the crypto world and sold a dog photo as an NFT for $20k'