Emergence and Operations of the Scattered LAPSUS$ Hunters Cybercrime Supergroup
A new cybercrime supergroup known as Scattered LAPSUS$ Hunters has emerged in 2025, combining the capabilities and tactics of three notorious threat actors: Scattered Spider, LAPSUS$, and ShinyHunters. This alliance marks a significant escalation in the threat landscape, as the group leverages a blend of social engineering, technical attacks, and public extortion to target high-value enterprise environments. The group is known for its multi-phase assaults, which often begin with sophisticated social engineering techniques such as phone-based vishing to gain initial access, particularly by targeting help desks and exploiting human vulnerabilities. Once inside, the attackers employ insider recruitment, source code theft, and large-scale data exfiltration, drawing on the distinct strengths of each constituent group. Scattered LAPSUS$ Hunters have focused their attacks on major SaaS platforms, including Salesforce, as well as enterprise applications from Oracle and SAP. Their victim list includes prominent organizations across retail, aviation, insurance, and automotive sectors, with named targets such as Home Depot, Marriott, the National Bank of Canada, and Tata Motors' Jaguar Land Rover. The group’s operations are characterized by unpredictability and a willingness to disrupt major businesses, often causing significant operational and reputational damage. Unlike traditional ransomware groups, Scattered LAPSUS$ Hunters do not limit themselves to endpoint infections and ransom demands; they also engage in ransoming stolen data and public extortion campaigns. The group’s members, reportedly including Western teenagers with substantial cryptocurrency holdings, operate with little regard for the consequences of their actions, further complicating law enforcement efforts. Their tactics reflect a shift from the previously dominant Russian ransomware model to a more chaotic, opportunistic approach. The group’s emergence from the cybercrime community known as The Com highlights the evolving nature of cybercriminal alliances and the increasing sophistication of their playbooks. Security experts have noted that the group’s attacks are not only technically advanced but also highly adaptive, making them particularly challenging to defend against. Organizations are advised to strengthen their social engineering defenses, monitor for insider threats, and enhance detection capabilities for unusual access patterns. The rise of Scattered LAPSUS$ Hunters underscores the need for a holistic security posture that addresses both technical and human vulnerabilities. Their activities in 2025 have set a new benchmark for the scale and impact of cybercrime supergroups, prompting urgent calls for improved cross-sector collaboration and intelligence sharing.

Get ahead of threats like this
Mallory correlates global threat intelligence with your attack surface — know if you’re exposed before adversaries strike.
How this story unfolded
5 events from the most recent confirmed update back to the earliest known activity.
ShinySp1d3r RaaS launch is previewed or linked to the group
The sources say Scattered LAPSUS$ Hunters is linked to the previewed or upcoming launch of 'ShinySp1d3r RaaS,' an English-speaking ransomware-as-a-service offering. This development is presented as a notable shift in the cybercrime ecosystem.
Attackers target cybersecurity researchers with malware
The group was also linked to incidents in which cybersecurity researchers were targeted with malware. This reflects an expansion beyond enterprise victims to people investigating or tracking the threat.
Group threatens release of stolen customer/CRM data for extortion
The collective threatened to publish stolen customer or CRM data unless victims paid a ransom, reflecting its blend of data theft and extortion. The reporting does not identify the victim organization or exact timing.
Group leaks personal data of U.S. government officials
Scattered LAPSUS$ Hunters reportedly leaked sensitive personal data belonging to U.S. government officials, marking an escalation into highly sensitive targets. The sources describe this as a recent incident but do not provide a precise date.
Law enforcement arrests some Scattered LAPSUS$ Hunters members
The references state that law enforcement has made some arrests tied to the loosely organized Scattered LAPSUS$ Hunters collective. No specific dates or jurisdictions are provided in the source material.
Related entities
Vulnerabilities, threat actors, malware, products, organizations, and breaches Mallory has linked to this story.
Sources
3 references tracked. Mallory keeps watching after this page renders.
Scattered LAPSUS$ Hunters: 2025's Most Dangerous Cybercrime Supergroup
picussecurity.com
Open sourceMadman Theory Spurs Crazy Scattered Lapsus$ Hunters Playbook
bankinfosecurity.com
Open sourceMadman Theory Spurs Crazy Scattered Lapsus$ Hunters Playbook
govinfosecurity.com
Open sourceSee the full picture, correlated to your attack surface.
Map indicators from this story to your assets and identify affected systems in minutes.
Every observed campaign, victim, and pivot linked to actors named in this story.
Malware, exploits, and IOCs connected to the activity described here.
YARA, Sigma, and Snort rules deployed to your SIEM as soon as they’re published.
Get matching new stories delivered to your team as they break — not the next morning.
Ask questions about this story and take action on the answers.


