One of Trump’s Closest Advisors Is Impersonated After Phone Is Hacked
- In 2025, Susie Wiles, a key advisor to Donald Trump and White House chief of staff, had her personal phone compromised, resulting in attackers impersonating her to contact influential Republican figures and leaders in the business community.
- The impersonation followed unauthorized access that gave hackers Wiles’s private contacts, and the FBI is investigating amid reports that the hack may involve artificial intelligence voice spoofing and political motives.
- Fraudulent messages and calls impersonated Wiles to solicit sensitive information, including requests for a cash transfer and asking a lawmaker to compile a list of potential presidential pardons.
- FBI Director Kash Patel emphasized that the agency gives top priority to any threats targeting Trump and his team, while cybersecurity specialist Jake Williams expressed skepticism about the administration’s commitment to security protocols, suggesting they likely did not complete their security training.
- The incident highlights ongoing security vulnerabilities in the Trump administration and suggests the spoofing campaign may be a cybercriminal fraud scheme rather than espionage, with federal authorities still determining its full goal and perpetrators.
11 Articles
11 Articles
A Hacker May Have Deepfaked Trump’s Chief of Staff in a Phishing Campaign
Plus: An Iranian man pleads guilty to a Baltimore ransomware attack, Russia’s nuclear blueprints get leaked, a Texas sheriff uses license plate readers to track a woman who got an abortion, and more.
Unknown People Pretended to Be Susie Wiles: Reports About Phone Hack at Trump's Staffwoman: "There Is only One Susie," Says The
Text messages and phone calls to Republicans and business representatives from a person who pretends to be the US President's chief of staff - this is reported by US media. What does Trump say about this?
Hacker who crippled Baltimore in ransomware attack pleads guilty | #ransomware | #cybercrime - National Cyber Security Consulting
An Iranian man has pleaded guilty for his role in a ransomware attack that crippled Baltimore’s computer network in 2019, halting critical city services and costing more than $19 million. Sina Gholinejad entered the plea Tuesday, admitting his role in the scheme that took hostage computer networks of several cities, corporations and health care organizations. […] Thank you for subscribing to our RSS feed! The post Hacker who crippled Baltimore i…
A Hacker Might Have Deepfaked Trump’s Chief of Workers in a Phishing Marketing campaign
For years, a mysterious determine who goes by the deal with Stern led the Trickbot ransomware gang and evaded identification—whilst different members of the group had been outed in leaks and unmasked. This week German authorities revealed, with out a lot fanfare, who they consider that enigmatic hacker kingpin to be: Vitaly Nikolaevich Kovalev, a 36-year-old Russian man who stays at massive in his residence nation. Nearer to residence, WIRE…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 67% of the sources lean Left
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium
Ownership
To view ownership data please Upgrade to Vantage