The case against the CEO of Telegram messaging app, Pavel Durov, is “an example” of the battle being waged against cybercrime waged by the French authorities, Paris prosecutor Laure Beccuau has said.
Durov was arrested after landing in Paris in late August and charged with multiple offenses ranging from refusal to cooperate with the authorities to administering an online platform allegedly used by organized crime for illegal conduct, such as trafficking and child sexual abuse. The Russian tech entrepreneur, who also has French, UAE, and Saint Kitts and Nevis citizenship, was later released on €5 million ($5.55 million) bail. The 39-year-old billionaire is banned from leaving the country while the case is ongoing.
Asked about the investigation into Durov and Telegram in an interview with RTL Radio on Wednesday, Beccuau said, “a good example of the kind of actions being carried out by the cybercrime section of the Paris Prosecutor’s Office”
She added that her agency previously had issues with the Coco chat website and Sky ECC encrypted messenger, which were both shut down.
“Organized crime is spreading in a world that we consider to be virtual,” the prosecutor said.
According to the Beccuau, France is reacting to this by amending its legislation and introducing a new criminal offense for administering an online platform that allows illegal transactions – one of the charges Durov faces.
Telegram attracted the attention of the Paris Prosecutor’s Office because its cybercrime unit “contacted the platform several times asking it to identify cybercriminals, especially in the area of child pornography. But the platform did not respond to these requests. It did not react,” she explained.
Beccuau noted that Durov is fulfilling the terms of his bail, which require him to report to the police twice a week.
Last week, Durov issued a lengthy statement on Telegram, insisting that the claims by some media outlets that his platform “is some sort of anarchic paradise are absolutely untrue.”
Telegram takes down “millions of harmful posts and channels every day,” and publishes “daily transparency reports” about actions taken against the dissemination of illegal content, including child abuse and terrorism, he said.
Durov claimed that he has cooperated with French law enforcement in the past and “personally helped them establish a hotline with Telegram to deal with the threat of terrorism in France.” He added that the platform remains open to working with state regulators to establish “the right balance between privacy and security.”