Mastermind of 'one-stop shop' fraud website with one million victims jailed
The ringleader of a website that promised to provide a "one-stop shop for phishing" has been jailed for eight and a half years.
Zak Coyne, 24, headed up a platform called LabHost which defrauded at least one million victims across the world - including 70,000 in the UK - of more than £100m by tricking them into using payment services and shopping sites that looked real.
More than 2,000 scammers signed up to the subscription-based site, many without technical skills, and used it to bombard victims with text messages which took them through to the payment sites.
Coyne, of Huddersfield, was sentenced at Manchester Crown Court on Tuesday after admitting three fraud-related offences last year.
His site, LabHost, was taken down in April 2024 following a combined law enforcement operation between the Metropolitan Police and global agencies.
Between August 2021 and October 2023, Coyne played a key role in creating, operating and administering the site.
Labhost described itself as a "one-stop shop for phishing" created "for spammers by spammers".
For a large monthly membership fee, the website provided its subscribers with access to phishing pages to defraud victims, which had the appearance of legitimate major banking, government and commercial websites but were fake.
Using authorised push payment (APP) fraud, amateur scammers could steal identity information, including 480,000 bank and credit card numbers and 64,000 PIN codes, known in criminal slang as "fullz data".
Criminals used the site to defraud at least one million victims in 91 countries, with the total losses to victims totalling £32m in the UK and an estimated £100m globally. LabHost itself made nearly £1 million ($1.25m) in profits from criminals.
Some 25,000 of the UK victims were identified by police and sent text messages informing them which fake online payment services and shopping sites could have taken their money. Detectives said their personal details, found in a data dump from LabHost, were now "secured".
After taking the site down, police sent a tailored video to 800 criminals who had used it, showing them the evidence they had gathered during the investigation.
Last year, 24 suspects linked to the site were taken into custody, with arrests at Luton and Manchester airports. Worldwide, 70 properties were searched and one British man charged.
Commander Stephen Clayman of the Metropolitan Police said the cases demonstrated the "commitment across law enforcement to identify and hold those to account who facilitate criminal enabling functions and think they can remain undetected. We will find you and take action."
Craig Rice, chief executive of the Cyber Defence Alliance, said that such "cybercrime-as-a-service platforms" like this one had the ability to "enable thousands of other fraudsters to conduct online frauds that impacts bank and retail customers across the UK".
Thomas Short, Specialist Prosecutor for the Crown Prosecution Service, stressed that "fraud is far from a victimless crime and the harm caused by Coyne's offending are measured not just in monetary terms, but also in the distress inflicted on countless victims who fell prey to these scammers".
The gang's activities were discovered in 2022 by a small team of investigators funded by UK financial bodies to infiltrate criminal networks on the dark web.
This investigation is an example of a new approach involving police, the National Crime Agency and banking security experts to target criminals offering services to other criminals.
Police bust cyber gang accused of worldwide fraud
'I was scammed out of £75k by Martin Lewis deepfake advert'
QR code 'quishing' scams up 14-fold in five years

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Yahoo
Two hurt in Dupont Circle Park stabbing
WASHINGTON (DC News Now) — The Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) is investigating after two men were stabbed in Northwest D.C. on Saturday. DC man arrested soon after U Street shooting, police say According to a post by MPD at 7:27 p.m., officers received reports of a stabbing in the area of Dupont Circle Park. There, two men were found suffering from stab wounds. The incident remains under investigation. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
14 hours ago
- Yahoo
British lawyers for Hamas investigated by watchdog
The law firm trying to remove Hamas from the UK's list of proscribed terrorist groups is being investigated by a solicitors' watchdog, The Telegraph understands. Riverway Law made headlines in April when it launched an appeal to have Hamas taken off Britain's list of proscribed groups. The firm made a submission to Yvette Cooper, the Home Secretary, arguing that Hamas posed 'no threat to the UK people' and should be allowed to operate here on free speech grounds. Just days after submitting its appeal to the Home Office, the firm was reported to the Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) by Robert Jenrick, the shadow justice secretary. Mr Jenrick argued that Riverway's appeal potentially breached UK sanctions rules on terror groups. He also drew attention to apparent social media posts about the war in Gaza by Fahad Ansari, the leading lawyer in the case and the director of Riverway. The posts included claims that Hamas is a 'legitimate resistance movement' protecting Palestinians from 'UK-sponsored Israeli genocide'. The SRA is understood to be at an early phase of its investigation and no conclusions have yet been reached. In a letter to the watchdog sent in April, Mr Jenrick said there was 'a clear need to uphold public confidence in the legal profession and to ensure rigorous enforcement of the UK sanctions regime'. He said that there were 'significant questions as to whether Riverway have complied with their obligations under the UK sanctions regime, the SRA's own published guidance and broader professional standards expected of solicitors'. Mr Ansari has defended his firm's actions. In response to Mr Jenrick's complaint he said: 'We were in contact with OFSI [the Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation], external counsel and others who had represented sanctioned organisation[s], to ensure that we did not breach our duties under the sanctions regime.' Riverway submitted a 106-page application to the Home Office in April, accompanied by a video which was posted to its social media channels. The application argued the proscription of Hamas in the UK should be lifted in line with European Convention of Human Rights protections in the interest of freedom of speech. It also claimed the ban is disproportionate and that Hamas poses 'no threat to the UK people'. The ongoing appeal, believed to be the first of its kind, is being fronted by Mousa Abu Marzouk, Hamas's head of international relations and its legal office. Mr Jenrick welcomed the SRA's investigation on Saturday, telling The Telegraph: 'Our sanctions regime is pointless if it isn't enforced. 'Ansari is a shameless apologist who argues Hamas poses no threat to the British people. What nonsense. This evil death cult threatens free people everywhere.' Mr Ansari has previously appeared to make a series of controversial social media posts related to the ongoing Israel-Gaza war. In posts dating from last year he appeared to praise fighters of the 'courageous Palestinian mujahideen', wrote 'you should view Hamas as an army of angels' and dismissed international courts as 'hopeless', saying that 'only armed resistance' would help Palestinians. In April last year, a post on his X account said: 'Eid Mubarak to everyone celebrating especially the courageous Palestinian mujahideen who continue to resist the Western-backed Israeli genocide entirely on their own. You are the pride of this Ummah. May you celebrate Eid one day in a fully liberated Palestine.' Another comment posted in June said: 'If you believe genocidal Israel is the most moral army in the world, then you should view Hamas as an army of angels.' The SRA declined to comment. Mr Ansari and Riverway Law were approached for comment. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.
Yahoo
15 hours ago
- Yahoo
Body found by police investigating disappearance of woman
A body has been found by police in the search for a Colombian woman who disappeared after leaving her east London home. Yajaira Castro Mendez, 46, was reported missing to the Metropolitan Police on May 31 having left her home in Ilford on the morning of May 29. Her family has been told about the discovery of the body, which was found during searches in Hampshire's Bolderwood area on Saturday, but formal identification has yet to be made. Detective Inspector Jay Gregory, who is leading the investigation, said: 'This is a very sad development in the investigation and our thoughts are very much with Yajaira's family and friends at this incredibly difficult time. 'We continue to appeal to anyone with information that could assist the investigation to please come forward.' A post-mortem examination has yet to take place. The police said a man who was known to Ms Castro Mendez appeared in court on Friday charged with her murder and was remanded into custody. Her disappearance was initially treated as a missing person investigation led by local officers. The investigation was then transferred to the Met's Specialist Crime Command on June 5, after a range of extensive further inquiries suggested she had come to harm. Police were at a scene in Gray's Inn Road, Camden, on Friday as part of their investigation.