Case 1:19-mj-04785-UA Document 1 Filed 05/16/19 Page 1 of 7
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RlGlNAL
Approved :
LOUIS A. PELLEGRINO
Assistant United States Attorney
Befo r e : THE HONORABLE ST EWART D. AARON
Un i ted States Magistrate Judge
Southern Distr i c t of New York
- - - - X
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA SEALED COMPLAINT
- v. - Violations of
18 u . s . c . §§ 1343 ,
DEJAN MEDIC , 1028A and 2 .
Defendant . COUNTY OF OFFENSE :
NEW YORK
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - X
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK , ss .:
MEGAN A . DOLAN , being duly sworn , deposes and says
that she is a Special Agent with the Federa l Bureau of
Investigation (" FBI " ) , and charges as follows :
COUNT ONE
(Wire Fraud)
1. From at least in or about July 2018 , up to and
including at least in or about March 2019 , in the Southern
District of New York and e l sewhere , DEJAN MEDIC , the defendant ,
having devised and intending to devise a scheme and artifice to
defraud , and for obtaining money and property by means of false
and fraudulent pretenses , representations , and promises ,
knowingly would and did transmit and cause to be transmitted by
means of wire , radio , and television communication in interstate
and foreign commerce , writings , signs , signals , pictures , and ,/
sounds , for the purpose of executing such scheme and artifice ,
to wit , MEDIC received and attempted to receive wire transfers
that were induced from victim businesses through fraudulent
emails and phone calls .
(Title 18 , United States Code , Sections 1343 and 2 . )
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COUNT TWO
(Aggravated Identity Theft)
2. From at least in or about July 2018, up to and
including at least in or about March 2019 , in the Southern
District of New York and elsewhere , DEJAN MEDIC , the defendant ,
knowingly did transfer , possess , and use , without lawful
authority , a means of identification of another person , during
and in relation to a felony violation enumerated in Title 18 ,
United States Code , Section 1028A(c) , to wit , MEDIC impersonated
individual company executives in connection with the offense
charged in Count One of this Complaint .
(Title 18 , United States Code ,
Sections 1028A(a) (1) , 1028A(b) , and 2.)
The bases for my knowledge and for the foregoing
charges are , in part , as follows :
3. I am a Special Agent with the FBI , and I have been
personally involved in this matter . This affidavit is based
upon my investigation ; my conversations with law enforcement
agents , witnesses , and others; and my examination of reports and
records . Because this affidavit is being submitted for the
limited purpose of establishing probable cause, it does not
include all the facts that I have learned during the course of
my investigation. Where the contents of documents and the
actions , statements , and conversations of others are reported
herein , they are reported in substance and in part , except where
otherwise indicated .
Overview of the Scheme
4. Based on my experience and involvement in this
investigation, a Business Email Compromise (" BEC " ) scheme is a
scheme by which a target impersonates company employees through
the use of spoofed corporate email accounts , to defraud the
company or its employees , customers , or vendors of money .
5. Based on my involvement in this investigation , and as
discussed in further detail below, I know the following:
a. Since approximately January 2019 , the FBI has
been investigating a BEC Scheme which has used fraudulent phone
calls and spoofed email correspondence to obtain money from at
least fifteen victim businesses in the United States (the
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"Victim Companies " ) , including at least one located in the
Southern District of New York , by impersonating the senior
management of the Victim Companies ' European-based parent
companies.
b. The scheme is typically initiated through a
telephone call to the U. S.-based Victim Company from a European
telephone number . During this call , the caller poses as either
a senior executive or a board member of the Victim Company ' s
parent company , utilizing the name and title of a real
individual known to the U. S .-based Victim Company (the " Phony
Telephone Call " ) .
c. During the Phony Telephone Call , the caller will
request the Victim Company ' s assistance with a purportedly
urgent wire transfer of funds . For example , the caller will ask
that the Victim Company remit a payment for debts owed by the
Victim Company ' s parent company in Europe.
d. After the Phony Telephone Call , the Victim
Company receives an initial follow - up email from an email
address with a domain name that is either the same , or
misleadingly similar to , the Victim Company ' s foreign parent
company email , a process known as email "spoofing."
e. Following this initial conversation , the sender
of the spoofed email typically transitions away from the spoofed
email account by inserting one of five email accounts (the " BEC
Email Accounts " ) into the conversation , which are accounts that
have been established with the same well - known commercial email
service . Sometimes the sender of the spoofed email informs the
Victim Company that his corporate email is having problems , and
therefore that future correspondence should be with the BEC
Email Account .
f . Using this process , the user of the BEC Email
Account then corresponds with the Victim Company regarding the
payment of the alleged debts that the Victim Company ' s European
parent purportedly owes . This correspondence includes wire
transfer information , and frequently results in tricking the
Victim Company into paying the purported debts of their European
parent via wire transfers to accounts controlled by a member of
the scheme .
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Victim-1
6. Based on my review of statements made by
representatives of a U. S .-based subsidiary of a real estate
investment firm headquartered in London , United Kingdom , with
offices throughout Europe , and a U. S .-based subsidiary with an
office in New York , New York (" Vi ctim- 1 " ) , bank records , and
email correspondence , I have learned the following :
a. A Manhattan - based Vice President o f Victim- 1 (the
" Vice President " ) reported that on or about the morning of July
19 , 2018 , he received a phone call purporting to be from the
Luxembourg - based chief financial officer ("CFO " ) of Victim- l ' s
parent company . 1 Acting as the CFO , the caller stated that he
had an urgent matter for which he needed Victim- l ' s assistance .
The caller then stated , in sum and substance , that there was a
deal closing that day , and that he needed to pay a vendor . The
caller stated that if the vendor was not paid immediately , the
European parent company of Victim- 1 would have to pay a penalty ,
or risk losing the deal . The caller then told Victim- l ' s Vice
President that banks were already closed in Europe , and that he
needed Victim- l ' s assistance to pay us i ng banks located in the
United States .
b. Later that day , at approximately 11:36 a.m .
Eastern Standard Time (EST) , the Vice President received an
emai l at his work email address that purported to be sent from
the CFO ' s work email i n Luxembourg . This was a spoofed email ,
in which , among other things , the sender changed the parent
company ' s legitimate email format from ". com" to " .lu ," to imply
that the email had originated from Luxembourg. The spoofed
email requested that the Vice President wire approximately
$143 , 750 . 09 to a corporate bank account locat e d in Croatia .
c. At approximately 1 1: 46 a . m. EST , the perpetrator
then sent a follow up ema i l to the Vice President using the
email address "deuschland . gmbh00@[redaction l] . com" 2 (" Email
Address - 1 ," one of the BEC Email Accounts) . The subject line of
The Vice President reported to me that the actual CFO of
the parent company was known to him , and the caller impersonated
the CFO with a Germanic accent and certain mannerisms , such that
the Vice President believed that he was dealing with the actual
CFO of Victim- l ' s parent company .
2
The Government has redacted words that would identify the
service provider from the email address at issue.
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the email contained con t act details , providing Email Account-1
as the email that the Vice President s h ould use going forward .
The Vice President then notified his s u pervisor , who initiated
two wire transfers , for approx i mately $100 , 000 and $43 , 750 . 09 ,
to the corporate wire address that the perpetrator provided in
Croatia.
d. The r eafter , Email Address - 1 sent at least four
additional follow up emails to the Vice President , to check on
the status of the wire transfers .
e. The following day , the Vice President received a
follow up email from the ". lu " spoofed email account , purporting
to contain reimbursement information from the European - based
parent company to its U. S.-based subsidiary , but this
reimbursement information later proved to be false . Subsequent
correspondence induced Victim-1 to send another wire of
approximately $23 , 760 to the same corporate account in Croatia .
DEJAN MEDIC's Involvement in the BEC Scheme
7. Through FBI interviews with at least fifteen Victim
Companies , email correspondence , bank records , and my review of
non - content information obtained about the BEC Email Accounts
through a Court Order issued pursuant to 18 U. S . C. § 2703(d) , I
have learned the following :
a. The Victim Compan i es have been defrauded using
the same or similar methods , typ i cally linked by , among other
things , use of one the five linked BEC Email Accounts. For a
majority of the Victim Companies , correspondence with victims
was diverted to deutschland . swissag@[redaction 1] . com (" Email
Account-2 ," one of the BEC Email Accounts) . Based on non-
content data obtained from the provider of the BEC Email
Accounts , each of the five BEC Ema i l Accounts were linked by
cookies , indicating that they were all accessed by the same
Internet browser , and therefore controlled by the same user.
b. For at least seven of the Victim Companies ,
rather than provide a corporate account as the recipient for the
wire transfer , email correspondence provided the name DEJAN
MEDIC , the defendant , as the intended recipient of the
fraudulently induced wire transfer .
8. From my conversations with other law enforcement
agents , my review of investigatory files , and conversations with
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foreign law enforcement authorities in Hungary , I have learned
the following :
a. DEJAN MEDIC , the defendant , opened multiple bank
accounts in his name in Hungary using real identification
documents and a photograph of himself (the "Hungarian Bank
Accounts " ) . Based on my understanding of Hungarian banking
requirements , the Hungarian Bank Accounts were opened in person
by MEDIC .
b. At least four Victims Companies were fraudulently
induced to send funds directly to the Hungarian Bank Accounts ,
which were confirmed by Hungarian authorities as having been
opened and controlled by MEDIC.
9. Through my discussions with other law enforcement
agents , my review of statements made by representatives of a
Swiss manufacturing company with a U. S . -based Victim subsidiary
(" Victim-2 " ) , bank records , my review of investigatory files and
conversations with foreign law enforcement authorities in
Hungary , I have learned the following :
a. Through correspondence with Email Account - 2 ,
Victim- 2 was fraudulently induced to wire funds into an account
controlled by a precious metal company .
b. After it realized that it had been a victim of
fraud , Victim- 2 ' s European parent company enlisted law
enforcement in Europe in an attempt to retrieve or claw back the
stolen funds , but according to Victim- 2 , those law enforcement
sources informed Victim- 2 , in sum and substance , that the funds
could not be returned back because they had been converted into
gold .
c. On or about April 27 , 2019 , DEJAN MEDIC , the
defendant, was arrested by Hungarian authorities attempting to
cross the border into Serbia in possession of , among other
things , three serialized gold bars .
10 . Based upon my review of statements made by
representatives of the Victim Companies , email correspondence ,
and bank records , I have learned that between at least in or
about June 2018 , through at least in or about March 2019 , at
least fifteen Victim Companies have suffered a total loss of
approximately $3 . 7 million through the course of the scheme. In
addition , the investigation has revealed that the scheme has
also attempted to obtain approximately $6 . 8 million in
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. ' .
additional fraudulent payments from U.S. - based Victim Companies
that were unsuccessful .
WHEREFORE , deponent respectfully requests that a warrant
issue for the arrest of DEJAN MEDIC , the defendant , and that he
be arrested , and imprisoned or bailed , as the case may be .
EGAN. DOLAN
Special Agent
Federal Bureau of Investigation
Sworn to before me this
16 th day of May , 2019
THEHONORABLE STEWART D. AARON
UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK