Former govt contractor convicted for wiping dozens of federal databases

Published: (May 8, 2026 at 04:45 AM EDT)
3 min read

Source: Bleeping Computer

Hackers image

Conviction Overview

A 34‑year‑old Virginia man was found guilty of conspiring to destroy dozens of government databases after being fired from his job as a federal contractor.

When the company discovered Sohaib Akhter’s felony conviction, it terminated both brothers’ employment during an online remote meeting on Feb. 18, 2025, according to the Justice Department. Immediately after being fired, the brothers sought to harm their former employer and its U.S. government customers by:

  • accessing computers without authorization,
  • write‑protecting databases,
  • deleting databases, and
  • destroying evidence of their unlawful activities.

Prior Convictions of the Akhter Brothers

In 2016, Sohaib Akhter and his twin brother Muneeb Akhter were sentenced to several years in prison after pleading guilty to:

  • accessing U.S. State Department systems without authorization,
  • stealing personal information of dozens of co‑workers and a federal law‑enforcement agent who was investigating their crimes.

After serving their sentences, the two brothers were rehired as government contractors by a company that worked with more than 45 federal agencies and hosted government data on servers in Ashburn.

Recent Charges and Alleged Actions

In November 2025, Muneeb and Sohaib were again charged with:

  • destruction of records,
  • aggravated identity theft,
  • computer fraud, and
  • theft of government information.

Court documents indicate the brothers wiped roughly 96 government databases within several hours in February 2025, including sensitive investigative documents from multiple federal agencies and Freedom of Information Act records.

Key alleged actions

  • After deleting a Department of Homeland Security database, they asked an artificial‑intelligence assistant how to clear system logs.
  • Ran commands to prevent others from modifying the targeted databases before deletion.
  • Destroyed evidence of their activities.
  • Discussed cleaning out their house in anticipation of a potential law‑enforcement search.
  • Wiped company laptops before returning them to their employer.

“As proven at trial, Akhter participated in the unauthorized access of protected computer systems, the theft of credentials, and the destruction of government data affecting numerous federal agencies,” said Inspector General Jennifer L. Fain of FDIC‑OIG.
“The deliberate deletion of databases containing sensitive government information and the subsequent attempts to conceal that criminal activity demonstrated a blatant disregard for the security and integrity of federal information systems.”

Sentencing

  • Sohaib Akhter will be sentenced on Sept. 9, 2026, facing a maximum penalty of 21 years in prison.
  • Muneeb Akhter faces a maximum of 45 years for two counts of computer fraud, conspiring to commit computer fraud and destroy records, two counts of aggravated identity theft, and theft of U.S. government records.
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