{
	"id": "86e99b10-8a08-4706-b10d-24ad84954884",
	"created_at": "2026-04-06T00:21:46.594278Z",
	"updated_at": "2026-04-10T03:24:18.692399Z",
	"deleted_at": null,
	"sha1_hash": "dc0ab75d201fad907b69a2fe0091aeacd9894c5b",
	"title": "Hacking group focused on Central America dumps 10 terabytes of military emails, files",
	"llm_title": "",
	"authors": "",
	"file_creation_date": "0001-01-01T00:00:00Z",
	"file_modification_date": "0001-01-01T00:00:00Z",
	"file_size": 42223,
	"plain_text": "Hacking group focused on Central America dumps 10 terabytes of\r\nmilitary emails, files\r\nBy AJ Vicens\r\nPublished: 2022-09-19 · Archived: 2026-04-05 16:22:47 UTC\r\nA hacking group that has primarily focused on Central American targets released on Monday roughly 10 terabytes\r\nof emails and other materials from military and police agencies in Chile, Mexico, El Salvador, Colombia and Peru.\r\nThe data dump is the latest release from the group that has focused on infiltrating mining and oil companies,\r\npolice and several Latin American regulatory agencies since March 2022.\r\nThe release from the hacking group, which calls itself Guacamaya after a type of bird native to Central and South\r\nAmerica, follows a pattern of targeting entities the group sees as playing a role in both the region’s environmental\r\ndegradation and also the repression of native populations. Monday’s release focused on multiple military bodies as\r\npart of that dynamic, the group said in a statement.\r\n“To make it clear, the military armies and the police forces of the States of Abya Yala are the guarantee of the\r\ndomination of North American imperialism, they are the guarantee of the extractivist presence of the Global\r\nNorth,” the group said in a Spanish-language statement, according to a Google translation. “They are violent\r\nrepressive forces, criminals against the peoples themselves and their internal pyramidal organization charts of\r\npower are also reprehensible.”\r\nAbya Yala is the name used by indigenous people of current day Central America for the American continent.\r\nThe specific targets in this case, according to the release, are the Joint Chiefs of Staff of the Chilean Armed\r\nForces, the Mexican Secretariat of National Defense, the National Civil Police of El Salvador and the Armed\r\nForces of El Salvador, the General Command of the Military Forces of Colombia, the Joint Command of the\r\nArmed Forces of Peru and the Army of Peru.\r\nThe Chilean materials were cross posted to DDoSecrets, a site that hosts hacked and leaked data, publishing some\r\noutright and sharing other, more sensitive sets in the public interest, with journalists and researchers, as in the case\r\nof the remaining material.\r\nThis is the fourth Guacamaya release since March, all posted to Enlace Hacktivista, a website dedicated to\r\ndocumenting hacker history, sharing information security educational resources and publishing materials from\r\nhackers.\r\nEarlier releases have targeted the federal prosecutor’s office in Colombia, a group of international mining and\r\nenergy companies — as well as some of the agencies tasked with regulating them — from across multiple regional\r\ncountries, and another release from March on a Swiss mining consortium operating in Guatemala.\r\nhttps://www.cyberscoop.com/central-american-hacking-group-releases-emails/\r\nPage 1 of 2\n\nThe March release was to “Mining Secrets,” a massive, international reporting project involving 65 journalists\r\ncoordinated by Forbidden Stories, that exposed apparent corruption and the surveillance of journalists and\r\nactivists opposing mining activities.\r\nCorrection: This story initially inaccurately reported that the released files totaled 10 gigabytes. The correct\r\nfigure is roughly 10 terabytes.\r\nSource: https://www.cyberscoop.com/central-american-hacking-group-releases-emails/\r\nhttps://www.cyberscoop.com/central-american-hacking-group-releases-emails/\r\nPage 2 of 2",
	"extraction_quality": 1,
	"language": "EN",
	"sources": [
		"Malpedia",
		"MISPGALAXY"
	],
	"references": [
		"https://www.cyberscoop.com/central-american-hacking-group-releases-emails/"
	],
	"report_names": [
		"central-american-hacking-group-releases-emails"
	],
	"threat_actors": [
		{
			"id": "ae7c5e09-a79b-4dae-8ed3-f288b8d99810",
			"created_at": "2023-11-08T02:00:07.110982Z",
			"updated_at": "2026-04-10T02:00:03.416181Z",
			"deleted_at": null,
			"main_name": "Guacamaya",
			"aliases": [],
			"source_name": "MISPGALAXY:Guacamaya",
			"tools": [],
			"source_id": "MISPGALAXY",
			"reports": null
		}
	],
	"ts_created_at": 1775434906,
	"ts_updated_at": 1775791458,
	"ts_creation_date": 0,
	"ts_modification_date": 0,
	"files": {
		"pdf": "https://archive.orkl.eu/dc0ab75d201fad907b69a2fe0091aeacd9894c5b.pdf",
		"text": "https://archive.orkl.eu/dc0ab75d201fad907b69a2fe0091aeacd9894c5b.txt",
		"img": "https://archive.orkl.eu/dc0ab75d201fad907b69a2fe0091aeacd9894c5b.jpg"
	}
}