FBI bust aims to shut drug traffickers out of their super-encrypted communication networks
Kristina Davis
The San Diego Union-Tribune
March 15th, 2018
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Kristina Davis
The San Diego Union-Tribune
March 15th, 2018
Drug traffickers need reliable smartphone service, too, and Vancouver entrepreneur Vincent Ramos is accused of providing just that to criminal organizations around the world.
These are no ordinary Blackberries.
The guts of the phone that control everything from calls to photos to internet access have been replaced with a super encrypted messaging system, with signals routed through encrypted servers in Panama and elsewhere, all ensuring that the big-money business of drug trafficking can be done away from the prying eyes of law enforcement, according to investigators.
Ramos, 40, founder and CEO of Phantom Secure, was arrested last week in Bellingham, Wash., on a San Diego warrant, and on Thursday a San Diego federal grand jury indicted him and four of his associates who remain fugitives, the U.S. Attorney's Office said.
The heavily redacted complaint unsealed in the case lays out an effort spanning the U.S., Canada and Australia to cut off drug organizations from their secure communication networks. Authorities in Panama, Hong Kong and Thailand also aided investigation efforts, officials said.
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