Trail in Ecuador cyberheist leads to gamers' crash pad in Hong Kong

By Clare Baldwin and Nathan Layne

HONG KONG/CHICAGO June 1 (Reuters) - The paper trail left behind by $2 million stolen from a hacked Ecuadorian bank runs cold in a windowless gamers' crash pad in a gritty industrial area of Hong Kong.

The room, in a former factory in the Kwun Tong district, is the registered address for Jiushun Group Co., Ltd., the firm that received the largest single transfer of the $12 million reported missing from Ecuador's Banco del Austro (BDA) in January 2015.

King Yuen - an unemployed 25-year-old and a regular at the room's all-night gaming sessions and mahjong contests - said he had never heard of Jiushun Group, and he had no idea where the stolen millions ended up. Still, Yuen was not surprised to learn the loot landed in Hong Kong, having heard of such schemes when he mixed drinks in the city's downtown financial district, he said.

"The prize is just bigger this time," Yuen told Reuters.

For a graphic tracing the money trail from Ecuador to Hong Kong, see: http://tmsnrt.rs/1WugDmp

The $12 million taken from BDA and the $81 million cyberheist from the Bangladesh central bank's accounts at the New York Federal Reserve in February have illuminated weaknesses in the global money transfer system.

In both the Bangladesh and Ecuador cases, hackers exploited the SWIFT messaging system, which is used to move hundreds of billions of dollars and other currencies each day among commercial and central banks. The banking industry's high confidence in SWIFT has been shaken because, in both cases, cyber thieves infiltrated the banks' systems and sent fraudulent transfer requests through the network.

In the Ecuador heist, SWIFT was unaware of the January 2015 attack until Reuters contacted the cooperative last month.

The two unsolved cases also highlight how thieves could launder proceeds through existing money laundering networks in Asia. The heists may have required sophisticated hacking tools, but tactics used in the getaway - transporting and stashing the money - are as old as bank robbery itself.

In the Bangladesh Bank case, the criminals sent their loot to lightly regulated casinos in the Philippines, leading to a government inquiry in that country. In the case of the Ecuadorian commercial bank, they sought cover in Hong Kong's shadowy world of shell companies, according to court records filed in the United States and Hong Kong arising from BDA's efforts to recover its money.

BDA declined to comment.

Hong Kong is known as a free and open financial center - but also a destination for illicit money flows, made possible by practices that allow paper companies to proliferate.