The US Secret Service says it has disrupted a network of telecommunications devices that could have shut down cellular networks as leaders gather for the United Nations General Assembly in New York City.
The agency said it had found more than 300 SIM servers and 100,000 SIM cards that might have been used for telecom attacks within the area encompassing parts of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut.
“This network had the power to disable cell phone towers and essentially shut down the cellular network in New York City,” said special agent in charge Matt McCool.
The devices were discovered within 35 miles (56km) of the assembly, where leaders from around the world are meeting this week.
The agency said officials were examining the devices, but that the “well-organised and well-funded” scheme involved communications between “nation-state threat actors and individuals that are known to federal law enforcement”.
The equipment was capable of texting the entire population of the US within 12 minutes, officials say. It could also have disabled mobile phone towers and launched distributed denial of services attacks that might have blocked emergency services communications.
McCool told US reporters that the scheme involved unidentified nation-state actors sending encrypted messages to organised crime groups, cartels and terrorist organisations.
The devices were seized from SIM farms at abandoned apartment buildings across more than five sites. Officials did not specify the locations.
The discovery followed an investigation into anonymous “telephonic threats” directed at three US government officials this spring, unnamed officials told the New York Times.
Credit: bbc.com