9 Jun 2021

ANOM: Hundreds arrested in massive global crime sting using messaging app

10:26 am on 9 June 2021

More than 800 suspected criminals have been arrested worldwide after being tricked into using an FBI-run encrypted messaging app, officials say.

In Australia, 224 people were arrested including members of outlaw motorcycle gangs, mafia groups, Asian crime syndicates, and serious and organised crime groups.

In Australia, 224 people were arrested including members of outlaw motorcycle gangs, mafia groups, Asian crime syndicates, and serious and organised crime groups. Photo: Supplied / Australian Federal Police

The operation, jointly conceived by Australia and the FBI, saw devices with the ANOM app secretly distributed among criminals, allowing police to monitor their chats about drug smuggling, money laundering and even murder plots.

Officials called it a watershed moment.

Targets included drug gangs and people with links to the mafia.

Drugs, weapons, luxury vehicles and cash were also seized in the operation, which was conducted across more than a dozen countries. This included eight tonnes of cocaine, 250 guns and more than $US48m ($NZ66m) in various worldwide currencies and cryptocurrencies.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said the operation had "struck a heavy blow against organised crime" around the world.

European Union police agency Europol described Operation Trojan Shield/Greenlight as the "biggest ever law enforcement operation against encrypted communication".

How did the ANOM sting work?

The FBI began operating an encrypted device network called ANOM, and covertly distributed devices with the chat app among the criminal underworld via informants.

The idea for the operation came after two other encrypted platforms were taken down by law enforcement agencies, leaving criminal gangs in the market for new secure phones.

The devices were initially used by alleged senior crime figures, giving other criminals the confidence to use the platform.

"You had to know a criminal to get hold of one of these customised phones. The phones couldn't ring or email. You could only communicate with someone on the same platform," the Australian police explained.

Australian fugitive and alleged drug trafficker Hakan Ayik was key to the sting, having unwittingly recommended the app to criminal associates after being given a handset by undercover officers, police said.

Dubbed the "Facebook gangster" by Australian media outlets, Ayik is seen in social media photographs with large tattoos and a muscular physique. Local outlets say he has been living in Turkey since evading arrest, living a luxury lifestyle with a Dutch wife.

Police said he was "best off handing himself into us" as soon as possible, as he may be in danger himself, having unwittingly helped the FBI with their sting.

In total, some 12,000 encrypted devices were used by about 300 criminal syndicates in more than 100 countries.

What did the authorities uncover?

Officers were able to read millions of messages in "real time" describing murder plots, mass drug import plans and other schemes.

"All they talk about is drugs, violence, hits on each other, innocent people who are going to be murdered, a whole range of things," said Australian Federal Police commissioner Reece Kershaw.

In total, some 9000 police officers around the world were involved in the sting.

Calvin Shivers of the FBI's Criminal Investigative Division said the operation had enabled police agencies to "turn the tables on criminal organisations", with intelligence gathered preventing murders and a number of other crimes.

"We were actually able to see photographs of hundreds of tons of cocaine that were concealed in shipments of fruit," he said.

Statements from law enforcement agencies did not name any of those arrested in the sting.

In Australia, 224 people were arrested including members of outlaw motorcycle gangs, mafia groups, Asian crime syndicates, and serious and organised crime groups.

Police said they also seized three tonnes of drugs and $A45m ($NZ48m) in cash and assets, and acted on 20 "threats to kill", potentially saving the lives of a "significant number of innocent bystanders".

Morrison said the sting, which was called Operation Ironside, was "a watershed moment in Australian law enforcement history".

New Zealand police said 35 people in the country had been arrested, and about $NZ3.7m of assets seized.

"We believe the termination of these operations will have a significant impact on New Zealand's organised crime scene," National Organised Crime Group director detective superintendent Greg Williams said.

In the US, the FBI unsealed an indictment against 17 people for distributing the ANOM-enabled devices - eight have so far been arrested, while the rest are on the run.

The FBI is expected to present more details later on Tuesday.

Europol's deputy executive director Jean-Philippe Lecouffe described the operation as an "exceptional success".

The agency did not break down the arrests in each country, but local officials said they included 70 people in Sweden and 49 in the Netherlands, according to Reuters news agency.

Linda Staaf, the Swedish police's head of intelligence, said the operation had helped to prevent more than 10 planned murders in Sweden.

Undercover source theory?

Former FBI agent and former CIA officer Tracy Walder told RNZ's Morning Report that the agency probably had another trick up its sleeve now that this method has been revealed.

"Also I think it came to a point where a lot of people's lives could've been at lost. I know there was discussion of a mass shooting in Australia and things of that nature, and I think at the point it becomes necessary for them to tip their hand."

Walder said her theory was that the app was most likely given to a member of an organised crime group by an undercover source.

"Which is actually very similar to how the intelligence gathering process works rather than how law enforcement works.

"So I'm actually very pleased to see them using some of the trade crafts and sources and methods, because I think we need to be very flexible and nimble in these global, trans-national groups.

"Like terrorist organisations, international crime syndicates, I think [they] require different more unconventional methods."

She said she understood concerns about privacy as professor of criminal justice.

"New Zealand, US, the UK - we simply do not have the ability everyone's conversations all of the time. I know popular culture may make it seem we're a little more omniscient than that, but we're just not.

"The reality is if a government agency is listening in to your phone conversations, the reality is they probably should be - you probably have given them good reason to."

- BBC / RNZ