Two people were arrested in New York City after allegedly using backend access to StubHub’s system to steal the URLs for 900 concert tickets, most of which were for Taylor Swift’s popular Eras Tour. Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz announced the arrest and arraignment of two people — 20-year-old Tyrone Rose and 31-year-old Shamara Simmons — for a scheme that involved a StubHub contractor in Kingston, Jamaica. “According to the charges, these defendants tried to use the popularity of Taylor Swift’s concert tour and other high-profile events to profit at the expense of others,” Katz said. Most of the tickets were for Swift’s Eras Tour but other tickets were for concerts from musicians like Adele and Ed Sheeran as well as NBA games and US Open tennis events. Ticket sales, particularly for Swift’s Eras Tour, continue to be a prime target for cybercriminals targeting ticketing platforms like StubHub and Ticketmaster. Last year Ticketmaster had to dispute claims made on the dark web that hackers had access to working ticket barcodes for several upcoming Taylor Swift concerts and other events. When tickets for the tour initially went on sale in 2022, the Ticketmaster website was crippled by bots flooding the platform with requests in an effort to jump the line ahead of real life fans. The ticket company told local news outlets that when it discovered the scheme, it reported it to the third party vendor SGS, Jamaican law enforcement and to Katz’ office. In total, Rose and the accomplice sent 993 tickets purchased as part of about 350 StubHub orders. The co-conspirators downloaded the tickets from the URLs and then posted them on StubHub, allowing them to sell the tickets for a profit of about $635,000. Rose and his co-conspirator re-directed the URLs to the emails of Simmons and a now-deceased accomplice, both of whom lived in Queens, New York.
This Cyber News was published on therecord.media. Publication date: Thu, 06 Mar 2025 15:55:05 +0000