An Armenian national is in federal custody and faces charges stemming from their alleged involvement in a spree of attacks in 2019 and 2020 involving Ryuk ransomware, the Justice Department said Wednesday.Karen Serobovich Vardanyan, 33, was extradited from Ukraine to the United States on June 18 and pleaded not guilty to the charges in his first appearance in federal court June 20. Vardanyan is awaiting a seven-day jury trial scheduled to begin Aug. 26.Prosecutors charged Vardanyan with conspiracy, fraud in connection with computers and extortion in connection with computers. He faces a maximum of five years in federal prison and a fine of $250,000 for each charge.Vardanyan and his co-conspirators — a pair of 53-year-old Ukrainian nationals, Oleg Nikolayevich Lyulyava and Andrii Leonydovich Prykhodchenko, and 45-year-old Armenian national Levon Georgiyovych Avetisyan — are accused of illegally accessing computer networks to deploy Ryuk ransomware on hundreds of compromised servers and workstations between March 2019 and September 2020.Avetisyan is awaiting a U.S. extradition request in France, while Lyulyava and Prykhodchenko remain at large. Ryuk ransomware was prevalent in 2019 and 2020, infecting thousands of victims globally across the private sector, state and local municipalities, local school districts and critical infrastructure, according to authorities. This includes a wave of attacks on U.S. hospitals and a technology company based in Oregon, where federal prosecutors are trying their case against Vardanyan. Victims of Ryuk ransomware attacks include Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center, Universal Health Services, Electronic Warfare Associates, a North Carolina water utility and multiple U.S. newspapers.Ryuk ransomware operators extorted victim companies by demanding ransom payments in Bitcoin in exchange for decryption keys. Justice Department officials said Vardanyan and his co-conspirators received about 1,160 bitcoins — valued at more than $15 million at the time — in ransom payments from victim companies.The post Ryuk ransomware operator extradited to US, faces five years in federal prison appeared first on CyberScoop.