Romanian pleads guilty to 'swatting' US lawmakers and top officials
WASHINGTON - A Romanian man has pleaded guilty to participating in a years-long series of dangerous hoax phone calls and bomb threats targeting American legislators, law enforcement leaders, and government officials, the U.S. Justice Department said Monday.
In a statement, the department said that Thomasz Szabo, 26, who was extradited to the United States last year, admitted targeting more than 75 officials, four religious institutions, and multiple journalists in his campaign of intimidation. Officials said Szabo targeted private residences, including the homes and families of senior government officials.
Authorities say Szabo routinely phoned in bomb threats and reports of ongoing violence or hostage situations at his targets' homes or places of work, a technique called 'swatting' because it is meant to elicit the emergency deployment of heavily armed police officers.
Emails seeking comment from Szabo's lawyers were not immediately returned.
Justice officials described Szabo as the leader of a group that made a series of false reports to U.S. law enforcement, including a December 2020 threat to commit a mass-shooting at New York City synagogues and a January 2021 threat to detonate explosives at the U.S. Capitol and kill then-President-elect Joe Biden.
The department said that, in a two-month period alone, members of Szabo's gang targeted at least 25 members of Congress or their family members, six then-current or former senior U.S. federal officials, "including multiple cabinet-level officials," at least 13 then-current or former senior federal law enforcement officials, including the heads of multiple federal law enforcement agencies. Others targeted included members of the federal judiciary, state government officials, and members of the media.
It was during that time that one of Szabo's subordinates boasted of "creating massive havoc" in the United States, the department said. REUTERS
Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
23 minutes ago
- Straits Times
From triumph to Trump: S. Korea President Lee Jae-myung starts term with full plate
South Korean new President Lee Jae-myung (centre) and his wife Kim Hye-kyung after attending the Presidential Inauguration at the National Assembly in Seoul, on June 4. PHOTO: EPA-EFE – Freshly minted South Korea President Lee Jae-myung has hit the ground running, just hours after winning the snap election of June 3. And among the many urgent matters awaiting him is to get the attention of his American counterpart Donald Trump. Officials from Washington and Seoul are hurrying to set up a congratulatory phone call between Mr Trump and Mr Lee to happen as early as June 5, which would, hopefully, serve as a precursor to a face-to-face meeting in the near future. Local media reported that the two possible windows for a Trump-Lee meeting could be at the Group of Seven Summit in Canada from June 15-17, and the Nato summit set for June 24-25 in the Netherlands, both of which South Korea has been invited to attend. Mr Lee's first day in office on June 4 coincides with Washington's deadline for trading partners to submit their 'best proposals' to the table, ahead of the July 9 expiry of the 90-day pause on reciprocal tariffs. The doubling of steel and aluminium tariffs from 25 per cent to 50 per cent by the United States also took effect from June 4, and South Korea was among the countries hit. Speaking on a radio show on the eve of the election, Mr Lee had expressed confidence that he and his team would be able to reach 'compromise and adjustment in a way that benefits both sides' with the US , even putting aside his dignity when speaking to Mr Trump, if need be . 'If that is the way powerful countries operate, we must overcome it. If it's necessary, I'll even crawl under (Mr Trump's) legs. What's the big deal?' he quipped. Mr Lee, a former human rights lawyer, was sworn into office at 9am (10am in Singapore) on June 4, barely five hours after the final vote tally gave him a 49.42 per cent mandate. His closest rival, former labour minister Kim Moon-soo, garnered 41.15 per cent. The snap election Mr Lee, 61, won was widely seen as a referendum of his disgraced predecessor Yoon Suk Yeol's failed self-coup of Dec 3, 2024. Yoon was subsequently stripped of his powers by the country's Constitutional Court and is now undergoing trial on insurrection charges. Mr Lee inherits a burning portfolio following six months of political chaos left by Yoon's short-lived martial law debacle. The new President has acknowledged that beyond the uphill task of healing a fractured and wounded nation, a key priority for him would be to regain the trust of its biggest ally, the US, and to iron out urgent trade issues. Data released on June 1 by the South Korean government have shown that the country's economy has started to slow down following Mr Trump's announcement of various tariffs since April 2 . South Korean exports fell 1.3 per cent from a year earlier, with steel exports, in particular, falling by 12.4 per cent. South Korea was the fourth-largest exporter of steel to the US last year. Amid the uncertainties, the Bank of Korea on May 29 slashed the country's economic growth forecast for 2025 to 0.8 per cent, from its previous estimate of 1.5 per cent. The previous administration had begun talks with its Washington counterpart in seeking a full exemption from or reduction in the proposed 25 per cent reciprocal tariffs on South Korea, in addition to reduction in sectoral tariffs on steel, automobile and other imports. The previous government had repeatedly stressed the final push had to be done by the new administration from June 4. Dr Victor Cha, who is Korea chair at the Washington-based think-tank Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), says the first contact between the two presidents is important, given how it has been 'six months where the Trump administration has been moving 100 miles per hour while South Korea's been stuck in neutral without a government'. Speaking at a CSIS podcast on June 3 to dissect the election results, Dr Cha added that any major decisions on tariff negotiations are likely to be made by Mr Trump himself, which further necessitates a summit meeting between the two presidents. Professor Leif-Eric Easley at Ewha Womans University shared a similar assessment, suggesting that Mr Lee and Mr Trump could bond over their 'political survivor' backgrounds, and move the South Korea-US alliance 'beyond threats of tariff hikes and troop reductions to urgently refocus on military deterrence, economic security and coordinated diplomacy'. A recent Wall Street Journal report on May 22 about the US plans to reduce its military presence in South Korea had sparked fears about what it means for Washington's security commitments in the troubled Korean peninsula. There had also been concerns that South Korea, under Mr Lee's liberal-leaning stewardship, might worsen matters if it pivots towards China at the expense of the South Korea-US alliance and the US-Japan-South Korea trilateral partnership. Mr Lee had been perceived as 'pro-China' for his previous xie-xie gaffe where he had suggested in March 2024 that South Korea remain a neutral party in the cross-strait tensions between China and Taiwan. In the run-up to the country's general election in 2024, in an attempt to disparage then President Yoon's tightening alliance with the US and Japan, which had invited criticism from China, Mr Lee had said that Seoul could avoid antagonising Beijing further, especially over Taiwan Strait tensions, by simply saying xie xie, or 'thanks' in Mandarin, to China and Taiwan. But the new President has repeatedly sought to dispel such a notion. In his inaugural address on June 4, Mr Lee emphasised that he would seek a 'pragmatic' approach to diplomacy, and 'turn the crisis of global economic and security shifts into opportunities to maximise national interests'. He also pledged to strengthen the US-South Korea alliance, bolster the US-South Korea-Japan trilateral partnership, while improving relations with both China and North Korea, which he described as being in the 'worst state' because of the last administration. Mr Lee has since appointed Mr Wi Sung-lac, a former diplomat well-versed in Russia and North Korea affairs, as his national security adviser. Mr Wi, who is behind Mr Lee's 'pragmatic diplomacy' approach, spoke to foreign media at a briefing on May 28, where he gave the assurance that the South Korea-US alliance remains the 'cornerstone' of the President's diplomacy vision. 'Mr Lee aims to restore the trust for the alliance, which has been damaged by the unlawful martial law incident, and to deepen the ROK-US relations into a future-oriented strategic alliance,' he said, referring to the Republic of Korea, the official name of South Kore a. Pointing out that the advancement of North Korea's nuclear and missile capabilities is something that cannot be neglected, Mr Wi said Mr Lee's government will also seek to 'strategically engage' China and Russia to cooperate on the stability of the Korean peninsula. Dr Lee Seong-Hyon, a senior fellow at the Washington-based George H.W. Bush Foundation for US-China Relations, told The Straits Times that the new Lee administration's foreign policy directions bear watching. 'Today's North Korea differs from past iterations, as does China,' said Dr Lee. 'South Korea's domestic turmoil over the past six months may have created an inward focus that underestimates these seismic geopolitical shifts, so simply reverting to old foreign policy paradigms may prove inadequate when major powers are redrawing their grand strategies.' Wendy Teo is The Straits Times' South Korea correspondent, based in Seoul. She covers issues concerning the two Koreas. Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
23 minutes ago
- Straits Times
Mexico to announce 'measures' next week if no deal on US metals tariffs
Mexico's President Claudia Sheinbaum walks along with Mexico's Defense Minister Ricardo Trevilla Trejo during the inauguration of the Mexico Aerospace Fair (FAMEX) 2025 at the Santa Lucia military airbase in Zumpango, near Mexico City, Mexico April 22, 2025 REUTERS/Raquel Cunha/File Photo Mexico to announce 'measures' next week if no deal on US metals tariffs Mexico will announce measures next week if there is no agreement reached with the United States on the steel and aluminum tariffs announced, president Claudia Sheinbaum said Wednesday. She also called the U.S. announcement to raise the metals' tariffs to 50% from the 25% introduce in March an "unfair measure" during her morning conference, citing the free trade agreement Mexico and Canada share with the United Sates. Sheinbaum however said that Mexico's response would not be "an eye for an eye." "It is not a matter of revenge, or retaliation as they call it in English," she said. "It is a matter of protecting our jobs and our businesses." U.S. President Donald Trump had late on Tuesday signed an executive proclamation activating the tariffs starting Wednesday. The Trump administration also wants countries to provide their "best offers" to avoid other punishing import levies from taking effect in early July, according to a draft letter to negotiating partners seen by Reuters. Economy Minister Marcelo Ebrard is set to hold talks with high-level U.S. officials this week, Sheinbaum said. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
24 minutes ago
- Straits Times
Ukraine's Zelenskiy suggests truce until meeting with Putin can be arranged
FILE PHOTO: Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy speaks to the media during a press conference, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine May 13, 2025. REUTERS/Valentyn Ogirenko/File Photo Ukraine's Zelenskiy suggests truce until meeting with Putin can be arranged KYIV - Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy on Wednesday proposed implementing a ceasefire until a meeting can be arranged with Russian President Vladimir Putin. "My proposal, which I believe our partners can support, is that we agree a ceasefire with the Russians until the leaders meet," Zelenskiy told a briefing in Kyiv. "At this time, people will understand that the nations, Europe, Ukraine and the whole world have a chance to end the war," he said, adding that monitoring of the ceasefire could be discussed at the meeting. Zelenskiy said Kyiv would "be grateful" for support for the idea from U.S. President Donald Trump. Russia has resisted Ukrainian and Western calls for a ceasefire, saying that certain conditions must first be met. On Wednesday Russian President Vladimir Putin repeated Moscow's stance that any ceasefire would simply be used by Ukraine to acquire more Western weapons. Putin also questioned the point of peace talks after accusing Ukraine of ordering deadly attacks on bridges in Russia that killed seven and injured 115 more. Zelenskiy said President Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey, which hosted peace talks on Monday, had expressed support for a top-level meeting of the presidents of Ukraine, Russia, the U.S. and Turkey. The June 2 talks in Istanbul made little progress towards ending the three-year-old war in Ukraine, though the sides exchanged proposals as well as a plan for another major swap of prisoners of war. Zelenskiy said the POW exchange would begin over the coming weekend. "The Russian side has informed us that this weekend, on Saturday and Sunday, it can return 500 people," he said. Ukrainian Defence Minister Rustem Umerov has previously said the next exchange would focus on swapping the severely wounded and the young, as well as the bodies of dead soldiers. Zelenskiy said Ukraine had not received a Russian response to the document Kyiv shared ahead of Monday's meeting in Istanbul and he characterised the Russian proposals as ultimatums. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.