Search This Blog

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Justice Department Counters Russian Military Intelligence Unit Attack On US Targets

 by Kimberly Hayek via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The Justice Department and FBI on Tuesday revealed they have conducted a court-approved technical operation to neutralize part of a network of small office and home office routers in the United States that become commandeered by a unit of Russia’s military intelligence.

Russian Military Unit 26165—also known as APT28, Sofacy Group, Forest Blizzard, Pawn Storm, Fancy Bear, and Sednit—is part of Russia’s Main Intelligence Directorate of the General Staff and has compromised routers to execute malicious Domain Name System (DNS) hijacking operations across the planet.

They targeted individual U.S. military members, the U.S. government, and critical infrastructure in which the Russian government expected to gain intelligence.

U.S. Attorney David Metcalf for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania said critical data had been commandeered.

“In the face of continued aggression by our nation-state adversaries, the U.S. government will respond just as aggressively,” Metcalf said. “Working with the FBI—and our partners around the world—we are committed to disrupting and exposing such threats to our nation’s cybersecurity.”

Assistant Director Brett Leatherman of FBI’s Cyber Division said U.S. and global routers had been compromised and that the FBI will continue to use its authorities to identify and impose costs on state-sponsored actors who target the American people.

Given the scale of this threat, sounding the alarm wasn’t enough,” Leathernan said. “The FBI conducted a court-authorized operation to harden compromised routers across the United States.”

The FBI operation, called Operation Masquerade, is the most recent U.S. action to undermine continuous Russian state-sponsored cyber threats that exploit everyday consumer devices.

Since 2024, GRU actors have attacked known vulnerabilities in TP-Link routers worldwide to steal administrative credentials. They then obtained unauthorized access to devices and changed their settings to redirect DNS queries to GRU-controlled malicious resolvers.

The actors set up automated filters to identify high-value traffic before intercepting it. The malicious resolvers returned fraudulent DNS records that appeared to be legitimate services, including Microsoft Outlook Web Access.

This allowed man-in-the-middle attacks on what victims thought was encrypted network traffic. The GRU was able to harvest unencrypted passwords, authentication tokens, emails, and other sensitive data from devices on the compromised router’s local network.

The operation included technical contributions from Black Lotus Labs at Lumen, Microsoft Threat Intelligence, and MIT Lincoln Laboratory.

“Operation Masquerade was led by FBI Boston. It represents the latest example of how we’re defending our homeland from Russia’s GRU which weaponized routers owned by unsuspecting Americans in more than 23 states to steal sensitive government, military, and critical infrastructure information,” special agent in charge of the FBI’s Boston Field Office Ted E. Docks said.

He noted that the FBI employed cutting edge technology and leveraged private sector and international partners to combat the malicious activity and remediate routers.

Court documents from the case, filed in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, outline how the FBI developed and tested commands sent only to affected routers in the United States.

The commands revealed evidence of GRU schemes, reset the devices’ DNS settings to legitimate resolvers of internet service providers, and shut down the original unauthorized access points. TP-Link router firmware and hardware settings confirmed the operation would not interrupt normal router function or collect users’ personal data.

Legitimate owners can change the settings through a factory reset with the hardware button or by manually restoring settings through the router’s web interface.

The FBI has also been working with internet service providers to inform affected users.

Owners of small office and home office routers are advised to replace end-of-life or end-of-support devices, upgrade to the newest firmware, verify that DNS resolvers are the same as those provided by the internet service provider, and review firewall rules to prevent unnecessary remote management access.

The GRU’s Unit 26165 was the subject of May 2025 joint advisory from the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, as well as international partners, describing how the unit attacked Western logistics and technology companies delivering aid to Ukraine. The campaign, dating back to 2022, impacted organizations in 13 nations, including the United States, Germany, and France.

In April 2025, French officials said a series of hacks since 2021 were the work of the same GRU unit.

The Russian military intelligence service (GRU) has been deploying a cyber-offensive modus operandi called APT28 against France for several years. It has targeted around 10 French entities since 2021,” Jean-Noël Barrot, the French foreign minister, wrote on social media platform X.

In a February 2024 disruption, the Justice Department took apart a GRU-controlled botnet that had attacked hundreds of small or home office routers around the world with malware. The FBI used the same malware to copy and delete stolen data while changing firewall rules to ban remote management access.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/justice-department-counters-russian-military-intelligence-unit-attack-us-targets

California Supreme Court Orders "Rogue" Sheriff To Pause Election Fraud Probe

 by Jacki Thrapp via The Epoch Times,

Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco was ordered by the California Supreme Court on April 8 to halt his investigation into 2025 election fraud allegations so the judges can review the legal challenges that his probe faces.

Bianco, a Republican who is running for California governor, seized more than half a million 2025 election ballots after allegedly receiving complaints from locals.

Then, last month he seized an additional 1,000 boxes of election materials.

Local election officials told the county Board of Supervisors that his decision to take the ballots was unfounded.

California Attorney General Rob Bonta, a Democrat, asked the court to step in and stop the investigation, saying that Bianco did not have authority to take the ballots.

Bianco seized another 426 boxes of ballots last week.

The top court ordered Bianco and his team to “pause the investigation into the November 2025 special election and preserve all seized items.”

“Today’s decision by the California Supreme Court reins in the destabilizing actions of a rogue Sheriff, prohibiting him from continuing this investigation while our litigation continues,” Bonta said in a statement.

The Epoch Times has contacted Bianco’s office for comment.

Bianco’s career in law enforcement extends 30 years.

In 2018 he was elected as the sheriff, coroner, and public administrator of Riverside County.

Bianco entered the crowded California gubernatorial race just over a year ago and edges behind fellow Republican, Steve Hilton, in the latest Berkeley IGS poll.

Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom, who may be eying a presidential bid as he exits his current seat in January 2027, applauded today’s ruling by the court.

“Today’s decision is a victory for democracy and the rule of law,” Newsom wrote in an X post on Wednesday.

“This rogue sheriff chased conspiracy theories, tried to undermine our elections, and got the ruling he deserved. Trump and MAGA’s election denialism is a cancer, a danger to our democracy, and it must be stopped.”

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/california-supreme-court-orders-rogue-sheriff-pause-election-fraud-probe

NYC bill would force Amazon to hire thousands of local delivery workers, send customer bills soaring

 Amazon is squaring off against New York City legislators over a bill that could force the e-commerce giant to hire thousands of delivery workers across the five boroughs — a rule that could send customers’ bills soaring by several hundred dollars per year, The Post has learned.

The controversial Delivery Protection Act – reintroduced earlier this year by Democratic Queens Councilwoman Tiffany Caban and slated for its first public hearing at City Hall on Thursday – could upend Amazon’s delivery model, which relies on more than 40 subcontractors who employ some 5,000 workers to drive Amazon’s branded vans and e-bikes across the city.

“This bill lights a ton of dynamite under the delivery industry,” said an industry source who works with Amazon and its logistics providers. 

So-called last mile delivery facilities would need to be licensed by New York City, according to a bill introduced this year.REUTERS

Indeed, if the bill becomes law Amazon would likely relocate its 10 city-based distribution centers to nearby areas just outside the city borders in New Jersey, Long Island and Westchester County, according to an economic impact analysis of the proposed legislation reviewed by The Post.

A retreat outside the city limits would result in deliveries that are not only significantly slower but also more costly — with New York City households paying an extra $664 a year to get their goods, according to a draft of the study by consultancy AKRF. 

“Carriers warn that on-time performance will suffer,” according to a draft of the study. “Customers may wait longer on average for their orders and it will become harder to meet tight delivery windows like overnight or same day service in many areas.”

The study was commissioned by Five Borough Jobs Campaign, an organization comprised of chambers of commerce, business improvement districts and economic development corporations.

New York City councilwoman, Tiffany Caban, introduced the Delivery Protection Act.Robert Miller for NY Post

The proposed legislation would require so-called last mile distribution centers to be licensed by the city and to also employ their delivery workers directly. Violations of the license could result in a facility being shut down, according to the bill.  

In the company’s first public statement on the situation, Amazon spokesperson Kelly Nantel on Wednesday confirmed to The Post that the legislation “would also force us to consider relocating delivery operations outside of the city.”

“We’re committed to creating good jobs, supporting our thousands of employees and local small business partners in New York City, and providing fast, affordable delivery in a safe working environment,” Nantel said.

Amazon does not employ its delivery drivers of vans and e-bikes.Christopher Sadowski

“As written, this legislation would directly undermine that commitment, threatening the more than 40 Delivery Service Partners we work with in New York City every day and putting the jobs of their more than 5,000 employees at risk,” she added.

The bill is backed by the Teamsters union, which has been trying to organize Amazon warehouse workers for years but does not yet have a contract with the company. 

The union maintains that the licensing requirement would also apply to warehouses located outside of the city as long as they are providing last-mile delivery into the city, said spokesman Matt McQuaid.

Hundreds of supporters and opponents of the legislation are gearing up for rallies on Thursday outside  City Hall. Democratic socialist Mayor Zohran Mamdani and City Council Speaker Julie Menin have not yet weighed in on the proposal — although both have come down hard on the food delivery apps.

The mayor’s office did not respond to requests for comment. A spokesman for Menin, a Manhattan Dem, said she is waiting for the “bill to go through the legislative process, to receive input and engagement from stakeholders.”

City Council speaker Julie Menin is “allowing the bill to go through the legislative process” before she weighs in on its merits.Brigitte Stelzer for NY Post

“It’s a tough bill and needs a lot of work,”  said Upper West Side Councilwoman Gale Brewer, a Dem who is among 31 co-sponsors of the legislation. “It won’t be a quick process.”

A newly formed coalition called New York Delivers includes small business owners who deliver for Amazon, along with the city’s Chambers of Commerce. They say Amazon is not the only target of the legislation.

Other companies including FedEx, DHL, FreshDirect, DoorDash and dozens of logistics providers would either be required to apply for city licenses or even be put out of business, according to the coalition’s spokesperson.

A DoorDash rep said the company plans to submit testimony at the Thursday hearing.

The Teamsters argue that the bill provides sorely needed worker protections and training and ensures that Amazon’s vehicles – which are leased by Amazon’s delivery service providers known as DSPs – are in good condition.

“Amazon wants to avoid legal liability,” when drivers are involved in accidents, McQuaid said.

A NYC comptroller report last year showed that crashes near last-mile facilities that resulted in injuries increased by 16% in 2024. Truck-related crashes increased by 146% and that Amazon’s DSP program had a higher injury rate than other similar last mile courier companies, the report found.

Some e-bike Amazon drivers are paid about $20 an hour.Christopher Sadowski

Two logistics companies that partner with Amazon insist their workers are paid above average wages, get full health care and undergo safety training.

“We are not fly-by-night operations,” Juan Martinez, who owns COPR Industries, told The Post.

His company employs more than 100 Amazon drivers who are paid $20.50 an hour for operating e-bikes and $23.75 an hour for driving vans around Brooklyn.

DashWave Delivery, which operates in Manhattan and employs up to 150 drivers, would be put out of business if the licensing requirement is enacted, owner Kris Basmagy told The Post.

“There is a ton of misinformation about what we do and who we are,” Basmagy said. 

While the legislation would affect any facility that makes deliveries in the city, there are exemptions, McQuaid said.

The bill excludes retail businesses that make deliveries from their storefronts directly to consumers, including florists and restaurants.

https://nypost.com/2026/04/08/business/nyc-bill-would-force-amazon-to-hire-thousands-of-local-delivery-workers-sending-customer-bills-soaring/

'AP: RFK Jr. Launching Podcast to Expose 'Lies' That Have Made Americans Sick'

 HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is launching a new podcast that he says will begin "a new era of radical transparency in government," according to a teaser video first obtained by the Associated Press.

The show, titled "The Secretary Kennedy Podcast," will launch next week and feature Kennedy in conversation with doctors, scientists, and agency staff, HHS officials told the AP ahead of the launch. In the teaser video, in a slick HHS-branded studio with ominous music playing in the background, Kennedy bills it as a new way to expose corruption and lies that have made Americans sick.

"We're going to name the names of the forces that obstruct the paths to public health," Kennedy says in the 90-second clip.

Joining the Trump administration last year gave Kennedy a new platform for his views, some of which contradict the overwhelming consensus of scientists. A podcast could further elevate those ideas. Administration officials say it will help spread an important message about chronic disease and improving health to a wider audience.

"This is part of our larger strategy to bring the Make America Healthy Again message to as wide an audience as we can," said Liam Nahill, HHS digital director.

The new communication effort from HHS comes as the department has faced a bevy of recent setbacks, including widespread criticism of its vaccine policy changes, a federal ruling last month blocking several of those moves, and resistance from key Republican senators that has kept President Trump's surgeon general pick from taking office. In that way, it could be seen as part of a broader rebranding strategy as the agency redirects away from vaccine efforts and toward a less contentious agenda on healthy food ahead of November's midterm elections.

But the show, which has been in the works since early in the second Trump administration, also reflects Kennedy returning to a format where he has long felt at ease. An anti-vaccine crusader and attorney before he entered office, he previously hosted his own podcast and has appeared on dozens to share his perspectives in long-form interviews, as recently as this week.

Tyler Burger, HHS digital communications manager and the producer of the new podcast, said while FDA Commissioner Marty Makary, MD, MPH, has a podcast, officials believe Kennedy's will be the first to be hosted by a sitting cabinet secretary.

"We're kind of bringing podcasting into the government as an official form and arm of our messaging," Burger said. He said the set for the show was pieced together largely with items the agency already had, and has the capacity for a total of four people to sit in conversation together.

Because podcasts are now commonly made not only on audio but video, they are regularly clipped and shared across social media platforms, giving them "massive" reach, according to Melina Much, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow for NYU's Center for Social Media and Politics.

Much said podcasts also tend to be more intimate, conversational, and friendly than a traditional interview, allowing administration officials to promote themselves without facing as much pushback.

Critics suggested the show would be used to spread falsehoods. It's "just another official channel to spread misinformation that will inject more dangerous conspiracy theories into the mainstream," said Grace Silva, spokesperson for 314 Action, a left-leaning political action committee aimed at electing scientists in Congress.

Though officials wouldn't share a list of upcoming guests, Kennedy let one slip when he appeared as a guest on a recent episode of "The Bossticks." He said for his own podcast, he spoke with Robert Irvine, the celebrity chef who has been tasked with revamping U.S. Army meals.

While Kennedy's teaser focuses on uncovering lies, HHS spokesman Andrew Nixon said it will aim to cover affordability and other topics that polls show are salient for American voters ahead of the midterms.

"Americans are united on the need to urgently address chronic disease, improve nutrition, strengthen food quality, and lower health costs," he said. "'The Secretary Kennedy Podcast' will cover all those issues."

https://www.medpagetoday.com/washington-watch/washington-watch/120703

As Opioid Use Declines, Gabapentinoid Co-Prescribing Rises

 

  • The number of U.S. individuals on long-term opioid therapy fell from 5.6 million in 2015 to 4.2 million in 2023.
  • Co-prescribing opioids with gabapentinoids increased, however, reaching 58.7% in 2023.
  • Meanwhile, the mean age of long-term opioid therapy patients rose from 52.5 years in 2015 to 60.5 in 2023.

The number of U.S. patients prescribed long-term opioid therapy declined from 2015 to 2023, but co-prescribing of opioids with gabapentinoids increased, prescription data showed.

In 2023, 4.2 million people had an active long-term opioid therapy episode, defined as a period of opioid dispensing lasting at least 90 days. This represents a 24.3% drop from 5.6 million people in 2015, reported Thuy Nguyen, PhD, of the University of Michigan School of Public Health in Ann Arbor, and co-authors.

Meanwhile, co-prescribing of opioids with gabapentinoids (e.g., gabapentin and pregabalin) rose substantially, from 47% in 2015 to 58.7% in 2023. Stimulant co-prescriptions increased from 5.9% to 6.7%, while benzodiazepine co-prescribing decreased from 43.8% to 33.5%.

Additionally, between 2015 and 2023, the mean age of patients with long-term opioid therapy increased from 52.5 to 60.5 years, the researchers wrote in a JAMA research letter. Commercial insurance had covered the largest share of long-term opioid therapy prescriptions in 2015 (40.9%); in 2023, Medicare was the primary payer (48.7%).

"Because older adults are at higher risk of adverse events from polypharmacy, the increased rate of co-prescribing, particularly with gabapentinoids, raises additional safety concerns," Nguyen and co-authors wrote.

Long-term opioid therapy typically is prescribed for patients with chronic pain conditions, but has been associated with opioid misuse, overdose, and addiction.

"Our main finding is that while long-term opioid therapy has declined, it remains common among Americans. Also, co-prescribing with gabapentinoids rose between 2015 and 2023," Nguyen told MedPage Today. "This is concerning because the FDA warns that concurrent gabapentin and opioid use may lead to respiratory depression."

In 2016, the CDC issued guidelines to encourage prescribers to use alternatives to opioids for chronic pain. The 2016 guidance was interpreted as setting strict limits on opioid use, prompting the CDC to publish updated guidelines in 2022.

As opioid prescriptions decreased, the use of gabapentin and pregabalin -- both widely prescribed off-label for a number of pain syndromes -- increased. In 2019, the FDA issued a warning about respiratory problems that can occur if gabapentinoids are used alongside opioids or other central nervous system depressants. Prescribing information now includes this risk.

"Over 4 million Americans are on long-term opioids, many of whom likely suffer from chronic pain," Nguyen said. "There is a need for ongoing commitment to evidence-informed guidelines for managing chronic pain."

For their study, Nguyen and colleagues analyzed data from 2015 through 2023 in the IQVIA Longitudinal Prescription Database, which captured 92% of prescriptions from U.S. retail pharmacies.

A long-term episode was defined as a period of opioid dispensing lasting 90 days or longer with either a medication supply of 120 days or longer, or opioid dispensing 10 or more times within 180 days of an initial prescription, with no opioid fills in the preceding 90 days.

Researchers calculated the annual number of patients with long-term opioid therapy episodes for each year. Opioid episodes lasting longer than 1 year were counted in each year they spanned.

Patients with long-term opioid prescriptions made up 11.5% of all patients receiving any opioid therapy in 2023. The average daily dose fell from 47.9 morphine milligram equivalents in 2015 to 38.6 in 2023.

In a sensitivity analysis that defined initial prescriptions as those without opioid fills in the prior 30 days, the number of patients with long-term opioid episodes was 5.2 million, a decline of 28.6% from 7.3 million in 2015.

The study lacked information about prescribing indications, patient comorbidities, and prescriber characteristics, the researchers acknowledged. Moreover, the IQVIA database did not capture all opioid prescriptions, including those dispensed at Veterans Affairs pharmacies, they added.

Disclosures

This study was partly funded by grants from the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

Nguyen had no disclosures.

Co-authors reported relationships with the U.S. Department of Justice, the CDC, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Daniels Health, and Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan. One co-author served as an expert witness in lawsuits against opioid distributors.