Phishing
Users have been sent personalised emails claiming to be from a US federal court

Email scammers use bogus subpoenas

Phishing attack hides malware in fake court documents

Shaun Nichols in California

A new targeted phishing attack is attempting to dupe users into downloading malware by sending bogus court subpoenas.

Users are sent personalised emails claiming to be from a US federal court. The target is then asked to download what is supposedly a series of documents on the case.

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Instead, the user downloads a malware package which records security certificates from the browser and uploads them to a server in Singapore.

The US government has issued a warning about the attack, pointing out that all court subpoenas are delivered by hand, and that users should therefore consider any subpoena delivered by email to be suspicious.

"The emails in question appear to be sent from a similar address that is not owned and operated by the federal courts," government officials said. "Law enforcement authorities have been notified."

The attacks use a method known as 'spear phishing' designed to steal information from specific high-value targets.

This scam properly identified each chief executive and sent it to his email address directly

John Bambenek Sans Institute

The attacker targets chief executives, for example, delivering personalised emails which evade spam filters and can appear authentic.

"An interesting component of this scam is that it properly identified each chief executive and sent it to his email address directly," wrote Sans researcher John Bambenek. "It is very highly targeted."

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