It's one thing if they discovered a criminal enterprise that was actually using 
this equipment as their communications hub,

But that’s precisely what the SS says:
“The U.S. Secret Service dismantled a network of electronic devices located 
throughout the New York tristate area that were used to conduct multiple 
telecommunications-related threats directed towards senior U.S. government 
officials,…”

and

“….early analysis indicates cellular communications between nation-state threat 
actors and individuals that are known to federal law enforcement.”

They dismantled a network that they found were actively prosecuting threats.

This wasn’t just some hacker’s randomly assembled kit of penetration tools. 
This clearly cost a lot of money to set up and maintain.

 -mel

On Sep 24, 2025, at 2:13 AM, nanog--- via NANOG <[email protected]> wrote:

Upon actually reading the article, this looks overblown, typical of the 
current regime.

Having a lot of SIM cards, a lot of phones, having phones in a rack-mount form 
factor, and plugging SIM cards into things that are not phones are not illegal.

The fact that a cellphone network could be overloaded by a lot of phones 
doesn't make it illegal to have a lot of phones. Even if it /does/ overload the 
cellphone network, AFAIK it's still not illegal unless that was your intention.


Their other justification is even worse:

"These devices could be used for... facilitating anonymous, encrypted 
communication between potential threat actors and criminal enterprises" - MEGA 
YIKES. So they're outlawing encryption now? Anything that can send 
communication can send encrypted communication. It's one thing if they 
discovered a criminal enterprise that was actually using this equipment as 
their communications hub, as I believe the law allows them to seize stuff used 
for a crime regardless of its other uses. But only in America (and Russia, 
Iran, North Korea) can they legally seize stuff just because it /could 
hypothetically/ be used for a crime, and then not give it back.



On 23/09/2025 18:46, Mel Beckman via NANOG wrote:
The U.S. Secret Service announced today that it dismantled a network of 
electronic devices located throughout the New York tristate area that were used 
to conduct multiple telecommunications-related threats directed towards senior 
U.S. government officials, which represented an imminent threat to the agency’s 
protective operations.


The SS say they discovered more than 300 co-located SIM servers and 100,000 SIM 
cards across multiple sites, and while the photo they provide shows gear set up 
in what looks like an apartment, it could be that interlopers have infiltrated 
actual Internet colo facilities.


As a colo operator, I’ve turned away more than a few sketchy potential 
customers due to their flakey stories requesting rooftop or window antenna 
locations. Be on the lookout.



https://www.secretservice.gov/newsroom/releases/2025/09/us-secret-service-dismantles-imminent-telecommunications-threat-new-york#:~:text=NEW%20YORK%20–%20The%20U.S.%20Secret,SIM%20cards%20across%20multiple%20sites.<https://www.secretservice.gov/newsroom/releases/2025/09/us-secret-service-dismantles-imminent-telecommunications-threat-new-york#:~:text=NEW%2520YORK%2520%E2%80%93%2520The%2520U.S.%2520Secret,SIM%2520cards%2520across%2520multiple%2520sites.>



 -mel beckman
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