Cybercrime FBI: Hackers Sending Operatives in Person to Insert USB Drives and Steal Data The FBI has issued an alert warning of Silent Ransom Group attacks targeting law firms. By Ionut Arghire | May 27, 2026 (4:33 AM ET) Flipboard Reddit Whatsapp Whatsapp Email The infamous extortion gang Silent Ransom Group (SRG) has been impersonating IT support in a fresh campaign targeting law firms, the FBI warns. Active since at least 2022, SRG has been targeting law firms in the US since at least 2023, mainly through callback phishing emails and social engineering calls, claiming to aid victims in canceling subscription fees. In a May 2025 alert , the FBI warned of SRGâs phishing emails containing links to remote access software that allowed the attackers to quickly exfiltrate data from the victimsâ systems. In attacks observed this year, the threat actor has updated its tactics, now posing as an employee from the victimâs IT department. âSRG actors either directly call or send phishing emails to urge employees to call the SRG actor posing as IT support,â the Bureau says in a new alert ( PDF ). During the call, the attackers direct the victim organizationsâ employees to grant access to their machines through remote desktop sessions. Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading. If the attempt fails, however, they send an individual posing as IT support in person to insert a device into the computer. âIn this scheme, the threat actor tells the victim they need to image the device or create a backup file to address potential impacts from the phishing email,â the FBI explains. After gaining access to the machine, the attackers escalate their privileges and immediately proceed to exfiltrating data, without deploying file-encrypting ransomware. For data exfiltration, SRG uses WinSCP (Windows Secure Copy), or a version of Rclone. In some instances, they copy the data to internal file-sharing platforms, including Google Drive and Microsoft OneDrive. âBy sending someone in-person to the victimâs location to facilitate the intrusion, SRG actors exfiltrate data to an external hard drive or USB drive inserted by the threat actor into the victimâs computer,â the FBI notes. The group then extorts the victim, threatening to sell or publish the stolen data online. The threat actor also contacts the victimsâ employees and clients to increase the pressure. âRecent SRG campaigns left few artifacts on compromised machines. Traditional antivirus products are also unlikely to flag the intrusion because SRG generally uses legitimate system management or remote access tools to carry out the attack,â the FBIâs alert reads. To prevent SRG attacks, organizations are advised to verify the credentials of all individuals with access to company assets, limit access to sensitive data, train employees to identify phishing attempts, and establish clear policies for IT support communication and authentication. Backing up all company data, implementing phishing-resistant multi-factor authentication (MFA), blocking access to commonly exploited ports, and disabling remote access and permissions for external drive installation should also prevent intrusions and the loss of sensitive and confidential data. Related: 185,000 Likely Impacted by 7-Eleven Data Breach Related: Lithuania Suspects Foreign Involvement in Data Leak of Over 600,000 National Register Entries Related: West Pharmaceutical Services Hit by Disruptive Ransomware Attack Related: Ransomware Group Takes Credit for Trellix Hack Written By Ionut Arghire Ionut Arghire is an international correspondent for SecurityWeek. 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The FBI warns that the Silent Ransom Group (SRG) is using a multi-stage social engineering attack against law firms, first attempting remote access via phishing and phone calls impersonating IT support. If remote access fails, they deploy an in-person operative posing as IT staff to physically insert a USB or external drive to exfiltrate data, using legitimate tools like WinSCP and Rclone without deploying ransomware. Organizations should verify all personnel credentials, train staff on phishing, enforce strict IT support authentication policies, and implement phishing-resistant MFA.