Dutch police on Friday said they have arrested the owner of Ennetcom, a provider of encrypted communications for a network of 19,000 clients, on suspicion of using the business for organized crime and shut it down.
Rotterdam judges ordered that Danny Manupassa, 36, be held for 14 days during an ongoing investigation.
Prosecutors said he is suspected of money laundering and illegal weapons possession.
“Police and prosecutors believe that they have captured the largest encrypted network used by organized crime in the Netherlands,” prosecutors said in a statement.
Although using encrypted communications is legal, many of the network’s users are believed to have been engaged in “serious criminal activity,” national prosecutor’s office spokesman Wim de Bruin said.
Ennetcom said in a statement on its Web site that the company had been forced to “suspend all operations and services for the time being.”
“Ennetcom regrets this course of events and insinuations towards Ennetcom. It should be clear that Ennetcom stands for freedom of privacy,” the company said.
While Ennetcom and most of its users are in the Netherlands, the bulk of the company’s servers were in Canada.
Prosecutors said information on the servers in Canada has been copied in cooperation with Toronto police.
The Canadian Department of Justice said the matter was under investigation and declined further comment.
De Bruin said the information gathered would be used in the investigation against Manupassa and potentially in other ongoing criminal investigations.
De Bruin declined to comment on whether and how police would be able to decrypt information kept on the servers.
“The company sold modified telephones for about 1,500 euros [US$1,684] each and used its own servers for the encrypted data traffic,” the prosecutors said. “The phones had been modified so that they could not be used to make calls or use the Internet.”
The telephones had turned up repeatedly in investigations into drug cases, criminal motorcycle gangs and gangland killings, prosecutors said.
All 19,000 of the network’s users were sent a message on Tuesday notifying them that the system was being investigated by police.
POLITICAL PRISONERS VS DEPORTEES: Venezuela’s prosecutor’s office slammed the call by El Salvador’s leader, accusing him of crimes against humanity Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele on Sunday proposed carrying out a prisoner swap with Venezuela, suggesting he would exchange Venezuelan deportees from the US his government has kept imprisoned for what he called “political prisoners” in Venezuela. In a post on X, directed at Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, Bukele listed off a number of family members of high-level opposition figures in Venezuela, journalists and activists detained during the South American government’s electoral crackdown last year. “The only reason they are imprisoned is for having opposed you and your electoral fraud,” he wrote to Maduro. “However, I want to propose a humanitarian agreement that
ECONOMIC WORRIES: The ruling PAP faces voters amid concerns that the city-state faces the possibility of a recession and job losses amid Washington’s tariffs Singapore yesterday finalized contestants for its general election on Saturday next week, with the ruling People’s Action Party (PAP) fielding 32 new candidates in the biggest refresh of the party that has ruled the city-state since independence in 1965. The move follows a pledge by Singaporean Prime Minister Lawrence Wong (黃循財), who took office last year and assumed the PAP leadership, to “bring in new blood, new ideas and new energy” to steer the country of 6 million people. His latest shake-up beats that of predecessors Lee Hsien Loong (李顯龍) and Goh Chok Tong (吳作棟), who replaced 24 and 11 politicians respectively
Young women standing idly around a park in Tokyo’s west suggest that a giant statue of Godzilla is not the only attraction for a record number of foreign tourists. Their faces lit by the cold glow of their phones, the women lining Okubo Park are evidence that sex tourism has developed as a dark flipside to the bustling Kabukicho nightlife district. Increasing numbers of foreign men are flocking to the area after seeing videos on social media. One of the women said that the area near Kabukicho, where Godzilla rumbles and belches smoke atop a cinema, has become a “real
Archeologists in Peru on Thursday said they found the 5,000-year-old remains of a noblewoman at the sacred city of Caral, revealing the important role played by women in the oldest center of civilization in the Americas. “What has been discovered corresponds to a woman who apparently had elevated status, an elite woman,” archeologist David Palomino said. The mummy was found in Aspero, a sacred site within the city of Caral that was a garbage dump for more than 30 years until becoming an archeological site in the 1990s. Palomino said the carefully preserved remains, dating to 3,000BC, contained skin, part of the