Anons post banker credentials possibly stolen from the Fed's computers

Financial Services // Government (U.S.)

Anonymous posts online credentials of more than 4,000 American bank executive accounts in the name of its new Operation Last Resort campaign, demanding U.S. computer crime law reform. A spreadsheet was posted on a dot-gov domain website supposedly containing login information and credentials, IP addresses, and contact information of American bank executives. The site is maintained by the Alabama Criminal Justice Information Center. “If true, it could be that Anonymous has released banker information that could be connected to Federal Reserve computers, including contact information and cell phone numbers for U.S. bank Presidents, Vice Presidents, COO's Branch Managers, VP's and more. . .The spreadsheet document contains usernames, names of individuals and their titles at banks across the U.S., hashed passwords (not passwords in plain text).” Anonymous stated in its first Operation Last Resort defacement in January – a breach of USSC.gov --  it had infiltrated multiple federal websites over a period of time. Previously on the defaced ussc.gov website Anonymous cited the recent suicide of hacktivist Aaron Swartz as a "line that has been crossed."