Operation Trojan Shield

Operation Trojan Shield
Part of Operation Ironside

  
ANOM app logo (top), the seal of the FBI's Operation Trojan Shield (bottom left), and the logo of the AFP's Operation Ironside (bottom right)
Operation NameOperation Trojan Shield
part ofOperation Ironside
Roster
Planned byU.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation, Europol, Australian Federal Police, and others
Executed byUnited States, Australia, Europol+
Countries ParticipatedSweden, United States, Australia, United Kingdom, New Zealand, Germany, Netherlands,
# of Countries Participated16
Mission
Targetorganized criminal networks that use encrypted communication devices
ObjectiveSurveillance of criminal activity
MethodHoneypot communication device with security backdoor
Timeline
Date begin2018
Date end2021
Date executed
  • October 2018 (initial device distribution)
  • 8 June 2021 (search warrant execution)
Results
SuspectsGermany:150
Arrests1,119+

Europol:800+
Australia:224
New Zealand:35

Germany:60+
Miscellaneous Results40 tons of drugs (over eight tons of cocaine, 22 tons of cannabis and cannabis resin, six tons of synthetic drug precursors, two tons of synthetic drugs), 250 guns, 55 luxury cars,;[1] more than $48 million in various currencies and cryptocurrencies.

Australia: 104 Firearms, 45 Million AUD

New Zealand: $3.7 million in assets, including 14 vehicles, drugs, firearms and more than $1 million in cash.[2][3]
Accounting

The ANOM (also stylized as AN0M or ΛNØM) sting operation (known as Operation Trojan Shield (stylized TRØJAN SHIELD) or Operation Ironside) is a collaboration by law enforcement agencies from several countries, running between 2018 and 2021, that intercepted millions of messages sent through the supposedly secure smartphone-based proprietary messaging app ANOM. The ANOM service was widely used by criminals, but instead of providing secure communication, it was actually a trojan horse covertly distributed by the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Australian Federal Police (AFP), enabling them to monitor all communications. Through collaboration with other law enforcement agencies worldwide, the operation resulted in the arrest of over 800 suspects allegedly involved in criminal activity, in 16 countries. Among the arrested people were alleged members of Australian-based Italian mafia, Albanian organised crime, outlaw motorcycle clubs, drug syndicates and other organised crime groups.

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  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference NZ Herald was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

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