US Charges Suspected Russian Hacker With Facilitating Cyber Campaign

BOSTON, June 10 (Reuters) – A suspected ⁠Russian ⁠hacker is now in U.S. ⁠custody following his arrest in Thailand last year and has ​been charged with facilitating a campaign of cyberattacks carried out by a Russia-aligned group ‌that victimized numerous U.S. companies.

Denis ‌Obrezko, 36, made his initial appearance in federal court in Boston on Tuesday ⁠in ⁠connection with a case that U.S. authorities alleged concerned a large-scale ​cyber espionage campaign being carried out by a group known as Void Blizzard.

He was charged with conspiring to commit unauthorized access to a protected computer and is now being ​held without bond in a case that is being prosecuted by the U.S. ⁠Department ⁠of Justice’s National Security Division.

The ⁠U.S. ​Justice Department and a court-appointed lawyer for Obrezko did not immediately respond to requests ​for comment on Wednesday.

Void ⁠Blizzard had been flagged by Microsoft in a May 2025 report as what it said was a new group that it had observed conducting cyber espionage activity against organizations important to Russian government objectives.

Active since at least April 2024, Void ⁠Blizzard’s activity has primarily targeted organizations in NATO member states and Ukraine ⁠across multiple sectors, including government, defense, transportation, media, healthcare and non-governmental organizations, Microsoft said.

An FBI agent in an affidavit filed in connection with the case against Obrezko said Void Blizzard’s activity has focused primarily on mass email harvesting across a wide range of U.S. business sectors and industries.

The FBI has identified at least 11 U.S. companies that have been hacked, a number that is believed to be just a fraction of ⁠Void Blizzard’s victims, the court filing said.

According to charging documents, the FBI linked Obrezko to cryptocurrency transactions that were carried out to buy a virtual private server and domain name that were used to conduct attacks ​targeting companies in the United States and elsewhere.

(Reporting by Nate Raymond ​in Boston; Editing by David Gregorio)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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