January 16, 2026
Two cybersecurity employees plead guilty to carrying out ransomware attacks


Two former employees at cybersecurity firms โ€” one of whom was a ransomware negotiator โ€” have pleaded guilty to carrying out a series of ransomware attacks in 2023. The Department of Justice announced the guilty pleas on Tuesday, saying 40-year-old Ryan Goldberg and 36-year-old Kevin Martin extorted $1.2 million in Bitcoin from a medical device company and targeted several others.

Goldberg, Martin, and an unnamed co-conspirator were indicted for the attacks in October, which involved using ALPHV / BlackCat ransomware to encrypt and steal data from their victims. As reported by the Chicago Sun-Times, Martin and the third conspirator worked as ransomware negotiators at Digital Mint, a cybercrime and incident response company, while Goldberg was an incident response manager at Sygnia Cybersecurity Services.

ALPHV / BlackCat is a hacker group that uses a ransomware-as-a-service model, with the developers who maintain the malware often taking a cut of stolen funds from the cybercriminals who use it to target victims. In 2023, the FBI developed a decryption tool designed to recover data from victims of ALPHV / BlackCat, which has been linked to high-profile attacks on companies like Bandai Namco, MGM Resorts, Reddit, and UnitedHealth Group.

The DOJโ€™s indictment claims Goldberg, Martin, and the co-conspirator used the ransomware in an attempt to extort millions of dollars from victims throughout the US, including a pharmaceutical company, a doctorโ€™s office, an engineering company, and a drone manufacturer.

โ€œThese defendants used their sophisticated cybersecurity training and experience to commit ransomware attacks โ€” the very type of crime that they should have been working to stop,โ€ Assistant Attorney General A. Tysen Duva of the DOJโ€™s Criminal Division says in a statement. โ€œThe Department of Justice is committed to using all tools available to identify and arrest perpetrators of ransomware attacks wherever we have jurisdiction.โ€

Goldberg and Martin pleaded guilty to one count of โ€œconspiracy to obstruct, delay, or affect commerce or the movement of any article or commodity in commerce by extortion.โ€ Their sentencing is scheduled for March 12th, 2026, where theyโ€™ll face up to 20 years in prison.

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