Ransomware Gang Takes Credit for Maple Leaf Foods Hack


The Black Basta ransomware group has taken credit for the recently disclosed attack on Canadian meat giant Maple Leaf Foods.

The Black Basta ransomware group has taken credit for the recently disclosed attack on Canadian meat giant Maple Leaf Foods.

The cybercriminals have made public several screenshots of technical documents, financial information and other corporate files to demonstrate that they gained access to Maple Leaf Foods systems.

Maple Leaf Foods announced in early November that it was experiencing an outage as a result of a cyberattack. The Mississauga, Ontario-based packaged meats company said it took action immediately after learning of the breach.

However, in the case of ransomware attacks, victims often become aware of the hack when the cybercriminals start encrypting files on compromised systems, at which point a significant amount of information may have already been stolen by the threat actor.

Maple Leaf Foods employs roughly 14,000 people and has a presence in Canada, the US and Asia. The company’s latest financial report mentions the cyberattack, but it does not provide any exact information on losses caused by the incident.

SecurityWeek has reached out to the company to find out if it plans on paying a ransom, but it likely does not intend to do so considering that the hackers have started leaking data.

Maple Leaf Foods is not the only major Canadian company targeted by the Black Basta ransomware. The cybercriminals recently also targeted the supermarket and pharmacy chain Sobeys. The group has also hacked into the systems of defense giant Elbit.

The Black Basta gang has named more than 100 organizations on its leak website. The group’s success is not surprising considering that it’s likely linked to the notorious Russian cybercrime group known as FIN7.


By Eduard Kovacs on Tue, 29 Nov 2022 13:32:35 +0000
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