February 29, 2012 - 11:18 AMT
25 suspected Anonymous hackers arrested by Interpol

Interpol said Tuesday, Feb 28, that 25 suspected members of the loose-knit Anonymous hacker movement have been arrested in a sweep across Europe and South America, AP reports.

The international police agency said in a statement that the arrests in Argentina, Chile, Colombia and Spain were carried out by national law enforcement officers working under the support of Interpol's Latin American Working Group of Experts on Information Technology Crime.

The suspects, ages 17 to 40, are suspected of planning coordinated cyber-attacks against institutions including Colombia's defense ministry and presidential websites and Chile's Endesa electricity company and national library.

The arrests followed an ongoing investigation begun in mid-February that also led to the seizure of 250 items of IT equipment and mobile phones in searches of 40 premises in 15 cities, Interpol said.

Earlier Tuesday police in Spain announced the arrest of four suspected Anonymous hackers in connection with attacks on Spanish political party websites. These four were among the 25 announced by Interpol.

A National Police statement said two servers used by the group in Bulgaria and the Czech Republic have been blocked.

It said the four included the alleged manager of Anonymous' computer operations in Spain and Latin America, who was identified only by his initials and the aliases "Thunder" and "Pacotron."

Interpol is headquartered in Lyon, France. The organization has no powers of arrest or investigation, but it helps police forces around the world work together, facilitating intelligence sharing.

Anonymous, whose genesis can be traced back to a popular U.S. image messaging board, has become increasingly politicized amid a global clampdown on music piracy and the international controversy over the secret-spilling site WikiLeaks, with which many of its supporters identify.