BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  FBI needs to step up fight against ransomware
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Thu, 23 Apr 2026 08:59:50 -0500
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'Felony murder law does not require that a defendant pull the trigger': 
Ex-FBI chief calls for ransomware attackers to face homicide charges if 
attacks lead to deaths

Date:
Wed, 22 Apr 2026 14:05:00 +0000

Description:
The FBI needs to "step up" in the fight against ransomware, says Cynthia 
Kaiser, former deputy assistant director of the FBI's cyber division.

FULL STORY
If a ransomware actor targets a hospital, and the 
attack results in a patient dying, the hacker should be charged with felony 
murder. This is what Cynthia Kaiser, former deputy assistant director of the 
FBI's cyber division, urged the US Justice Department to consider, just 
recently. 

In testimony before a US House of Representatives subcommittee hearing , 
Kaiser explained that ransomware attackers are causing deaths, citing 
University of Minnesota research documenting at least 47 deaths attributable 
to hospital ransomware attacks between 2016 and 2021. She added that the 
number is almost certainly in the hundreds today. She also stressed that 
healthcare is now the number one ransomware target, claiming that attacks 
against hospitals nearly doubled from 238 in 2024, to 460 in 2025. Kaiser 
says this is a deliberate calculation, since attackers know when lives are on 
the line, hospitals are more likely to pay.

"Felony murder law does not require that a
defendant pull a trigger, only that they commit a dangerous felony that 
results in death," she said during the hearing, urging the DOJ to pursue
homicide charges using existing felony murder law. 

She also said that terrorism designations should be explored, as well. Kaiser 
urged that the Department of State, Justice, and Treasury formally evaluate 
whether existing terrorism statutes apply to ransomware actors who knowingly 
and repeatedly target hospitals, which would unlock sanctions, travel 
restrictions, and diplomatic consequences. 

"I worked on these issues for years at the FBI and we need to step up even 
more, she said. They need additional authorities and resources to be able to 
[do so]. 

Some ransomware actors have deliberately avoided hospitals and critical 
infrastructure organizations - not because they were too difficult to target, 
but because they immediately attract the attention of the FBI and other law 
enforcement agencies. In fact, some ransomware groups publicly terminated 
partnerships with affiliates who would use their encryptors against 
hospitals.

 Via The Register

Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/pro/security/felony-murder-law-does-not-require-that
-a-defendant-pull-the-trigger-ex-fbi-chief-calls-for-ransomware-attackers-to-f
ace-homicide-charges-if-attacks-lead-to-deaths

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