In this blog series we spotlight one of the stories from our cybersecurity newsletter, Beacon.
Last week a Russian court sentenced Stanislav Moiseev, the head of the notorious online drug marketplace Hydra, to life imprisonment and a fine of four million rubles (approx. $37,500). Fifteen of his associates also received prison sentences ranging from eight to 23 years, along with fines totaling 16 million rubles ($150,000). According to state media, the Moscow Regional Court delivered the verdict based on a jury’s findings.
The group was convicted of producing and selling drugs and psychotropic substances. Reports indicate they will serve their sentences in some of Russia’s most severe penal camps, a factor driving their plans to appeal the decision. Hydra, launched in 2015 as a drug marketplace, was dismantled in 2022 through an international police operation that seized its servers.
The investigation gained momentum after coordinated raids in Russia and Belarus uncovered nearly a ton of illegal narcotics, along with cars, houses, and other assets linked to the gang. Prosecutors revealed that Hydra facilitated transactions amounting to roughly a billion rubles (9.3 million) annually.
Notably absent from the list of those sentenced was Dmitry Olegovich Pavlov, accused by U.S. authorities of serving as Hydra’s IT administrator. Pavlov was arrested in 2022 and remains in custody.
The Ministry of International Affairs suggested that Hydra’s takedown may have extended beyond drug trafficking to national security concerns. According to officials, the marketplace also promoted terrorism and other criminal acts for profit. Some of these activities were allegedly coordinated through call centers based in Ukraine.
The high-profile case coincides with the arrest of another alleged cybercriminal, Mikhail Pavlovich Matveev, a hacker associated with several ransomware groups that was known by the monikers “Wazawaka” and” Boriscelcin.