

Aziri worked for clients including Wirecard, a German company that collapsed amid fraud. Pictured is Markus Braun, former Wirecard CEO. Matthias Balk/picture alliance via Getty Images
A private investigator was sentenced to 80 months in prison after he admitted to his role in a massive hacking ring that targeted hedge funds, short sellers and journalists.
Aviram Azari’s punishment was pronounced on Thursday by US District Judge John Koeltl in Manhattan. The 52-year-old Israeli had pleaded guilty in April 2022 to fraud and conspiracy to commit computer hacking, as part of a deal with US prosecutors.
Through an interpreter he expressed his “deep regret.”
“I take responsibility, full responsibility, for my actions,” Azari, dressed in tan prison garb, told the judge before his sentence was pronounced. He said he regretted it “with all my heart.”
Azari had admitted to hiring hackers who targeted victims with phishing emails. Prosecutors said he played a “critical role” in the scheme and was paid more than $4.8 million over almost five years to manage intelligence-gathering campaigns and attacks that can compromise entire networks. They said his clients included the now defunct German technology firm Wirecard AG.
His case was part of an investigation into a vast hacking-for-hire campaign that targeted thousands of entities including hedge funds Coatue Management LLC and Blue Ridge Capital LLC, as well as nonprofit groups fighting telecommunications companies over control of the internet and journalists from multiple news organizations.
He was arrested after landing at John F. Kennedy International Airport in September 2019 and has been in custody ever since.
Fought Hezbollah
Azari served as a paratrooper in the Israel Defense Forces, fought in the 2006 Lebanon War with Hezbollah and later worked as an undercover officer for the Israeli police. His lawyers said in a sentencing memo that his firm was at first a lawful business that allowed him to use his skills, before he turned down the wrong path.
“Mr. Azari was successful at growing his business,” they wrote. “He should have stopped there.”
The US had asked the judge to give Azari 94 to 111 months behind bars, saying the scheme was “incredibly sophisticated” and “wreaked financial, professional, emotional and physical devastation” on his victims. Prosecutors said in their own sentencing memo that his apprehension was a “difficult achievement” in international cybercriminal investigations and that his sentence should serve as a deterrent to would-be hackers.
They said he ran a firm known as Aviram Hawk, or Aviram Netz, that hired groups of hackers, including one based in India, to steal credentials through emails that appeared to be from trusted sources. Wirecard used his company to gather intelligence on people and financial firms that had been critical of it, they said.
Exxon Probe
The government said Azari’s firm also targeted people and organizations fighting climate change, and stole documents that were leaked to the press. The US said that resulted in news articles about probes by New York and Massachusetts into Exxon Mobil Corp.’s knowledge of the risks of climate change that “appeared designed to undermine the integrity” of the investigations.
Prosecutors said they identified more than 100 victims successfully hacked by Azari, and about 200 other targets of projects managed by his firm. They said the hackers he hired number “in the thousands” and span the globe.
Azari asked Koeltl to sentence him to five years in prison, saying he had endured a “simply unimaginable punishment” since his arrest. He said he had been held in “utterly inhumane conditions” at jails in Manhattan and Brooklyn, including a one-year lockdown in a “mold-infested, windowless cell” for more than 23 hours a day without showers, hot meals or exercise.
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