AST April 2018 Magazine AST April Magazine (3.30.18) | Page 5
closed
network
Volume
22 of criminals, all of Phantom Se-
cure’s customers are believed to be involved in
serious criminal activity.
“By shutting down Phantom Secure, criminals worldwide
April 2018 Edition
no longer have that platform to conduct their dangerous
criminal activities.”
In collaboration with the Australian Federal Police,
Phantom Secure Advertisement Statement:
Royal Canadian Mounted Police, and law enforce-
ment agencies in Panama, Hong Kong, and Thai-
“Phantom Secure is a high-end communication service
land, Phantom Secure’s founder and chief executive
for executives who need an effective and proven solution
Vincent Ramos was arrested in Bellingham, Wash-
for all their concerns in the mobile field. For over 10
ington, on March 7.
years, our service has been tested worldwide without
incident.”
“This has led to our worldwide reputation as a market
leader in encrypted private communications, but more
importantly, a company that you can CONFIDENCE. We
emphasize trust, because without trust all service is
questionable.”
“Thanks to our innovation and reliability, we are recog-
nized and valued by our exclusive customers worldwide
as the most trusted private company.”
Most of Phantom Secure’s 10,000 to 20,000 users
are the top-level leaders of nefarious transnational
criminal organizations in the U.S. and several other
countries, and the prod-
ucts were marketed as
impervious to decryption
or wiretapping.
“Working with our interna-
tional partners in Australia
and Canada, we learned that
these phones have been
used to coordinate drug traf-
ficking, murders, assaults,
money laundering, and all
sorts of other crimes,” said
Special Agent Nicholas Che-
viron of the FBI’s San Diego
Division, who investigated
the case along with U.S. and
international counterparts.
(The FBI has arrested Vincent Ramos, the CEO of Phantom
Secure. The company is an established maker of custom smart-
phones. Motherboard reported that Ramos allegedly aided
criminal organizations by providing devices that were modified
to hide their illegal activities.)
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