How Russian Hackers Stole Millions from U.S. Investors — Putin's Trader [Video Documentary]
06/08/2024
He was young, rich and on the rise in Moscow. But when up-and-coming Russian oligarch Vladislav Klyushin boarded a private jet for a luxury ski vacation in the Swiss Alps, he had no idea it would come crashing down.
Klyushin owned a cybersecurity company in Moscow called M-13. The firm was secretly a front for a computer hacking and insider trading operation that plagued Wall Street for years and generated more than $90 million in illicit profits for Klyushin’s criminal gang.
Now, with exclusive access to the FBI investigators and Department of Justice prosecutors who chased Klysuhin around the globe, CNBC’s Eamon Javers can reveal the shocking details of this audacious criminal enterprise's spectacular rise and fall.
- We learn about their insider trading in stocks of American companies, including Tesla and other high-tech firms, and
- We see the crooks’ text messages, which reveal the bromance between the oligarch and a veteran Russian intelligence hacker at the centre of the crime ring.
In an exclusive interview, Javers sits down with a former Russian spy — an officer of the Russian FSB intelligence agency — who explains why all of this, and more, was so important to Russian leader Vladimir Putin.
And in a turn of events, the White House just announced a massive, multinational prisoner swap between the U.S., Russia and other nations. As part of the historic deal, the Russian government released high-profile Americans held in captivity there, including Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich, who had been in a Russian prison for more than a year. Also included in the trade were several Russians who had been arrested for various crimes and held in prisons in the U.S. and other countries. Klyushin was one of the prisoners released.
Watch “Putin’s Trader” for the full story.
Chapters:
2:03 The case agents
7:00 The Moscow connection
12:07 A bromance
17:58 ‘We suck’
24:19 ‘$420. Funding secured’
32:49 The defector
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