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A U.S. Army soldier has been charged with selling confidential phone records.
A 20-year-old man named Cameron John Wagenius faced charges from federal authorities in Texas on Dec. 20 for the illegal transfer of private phone records. The indictment for this case was disclosed later this week.
Wagenius was a soldier at Fort Cavazos in Texas. Court records didn’t specify his rank.
He is suspected of being associated with the online alias Kiberphant0m, which has been involved in several prominent data breaches, such as the Snowflake data breach. This entity also claimed responsibility for breaching the phone records of President-elect Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris, as reported by cybersecurity reporter Brian Krebs.
Reportedly, the purported AT&T call logs for the 2024 presidential candidates were shared online in November. The Verge highlighted that the authenticity of these call logs could not be confirmed yet.
The indictment didn’t give details on the hacking.
The indictment accuses Wagenius of selling “confidential phone records” online.
“We are aware of the arrest of a Fort Cavazos soldier,” Fort Cavazos told Fox News Digital. “III Armored Corps will continue to cooperate with all law enforcement agencies as appropriate.”
Fox News Digital has reached out to the Department of Justice for comment.
Wagenius will next be extradited to Seattle where the case is being handled.