The capital felt a chill today, not from the November air, but from the long, invisible fingers of a threat emanating from overseas. The FBI added three names – or rather, three ghosts – to its Most Wanted list: Said Pourkarim Arabi, Mohammad Reza Espargham, and Mohammad Bayati. They aren’t mobsters with tommy guns, but something far more insidious; digital phantoms accused of weaving a web of cyberattacks targeting the bedrock of American industry – aerospace and satellite technology. Details are scarce, a frustrating blankness in their files. No dates of birth, no places of origin readily available, just accusations that paint a portrait of calculated malice.
These aren’t smash-and-grab artists. This is a slow bleed, a meticulous infiltration. The feds allege a conspiracy to burrow into protected computer systems, not for quick cash, but for access, for control. They didn’t just want data; they wanted to cripple, to disrupt, to potentially compromise national security. And the method wasn’t brute force, but a chillingly effective campaign of social engineering – stealing the identities of American citizens, using them as masks to move undetected through the digital landscape. Imagine your life, your name, weaponized against you, against the country. No physical description is available, making them even more spectral, more difficult to pin down in a lineup, or even a grainy surveillance photo.
The damage, according to the charges, isn’t theoretical. It’s intentional, malicious. Protected computers weren’t just accessed, they were *damaged*. Aggravated identity theft isn’t a footnote, it’s a core component of the operation, suggesting a callous disregard for the lives they’re impacting. And layered on top of it all, a conspiracy to commit wire fraud, indicating a desire to profit from the chaos they’ve sown. The FBI isn’t talking about petty theft here. They’re talking about a coordinated, state-sponsored assault on American infrastructure, executed by individuals who remain frustratingly elusive.
The hunt is on, a digital dragnet cast across continents. But catching ghosts is never easy. The FBI is offering a substantial reward for information leading to the arrest of these three individuals, a testament to the seriousness of the threat they pose. Every keystroke, every connection, every digital footprint is being scrutinized. But they need help. They need eyes and ears on the ground, even in the virtual world.
If you have any information – no matter how small – regarding the whereabouts of Said Pourkarim Arabi, Mohammad Reza Espargham, or Mohammad Bayati, contact the FBI immediately. Don’t assume someone else will. This isn’t a game. It’s a digital war, and the stakes are higher than you think. Contact your local FBI field office or submit a tip online at tips.fbi.gov. Silence could be the most dangerous weapon of all.
🔠Key Facts
| Full Name | Irgc Cyber Actors |
| Charges | Conspiracy to Commit Computer Intrusions; Obtaining Information by Unauthorized Access to Protected Computers; Intentional Damage to Protected Computers; Aggravated Identity Theft; Conspiracy to Commit Wire Fraud |
| Aliases | None known |
| Date of Birth | Unknown |
| Race / Sex | Unknown / Unknown |
| Nationality | Unknown |
| Height | Unknown |
| Weight | Unknown |
| Eyes / Hair | Unknown / Unknown |
| Scars & Marks | None reported |
| Location | Washington D.C. |
📋 Source: FBI Most Wanted — Irgc Cyber Actors
If you have information about this fugitive, contact your local FBI field office or submit a tip at tips.fbi.gov.
Related Federal Cases
- Irgc-Affiliated Cyber Actors, Conspiracy to Commit, Washington D.C. 2026 · Washington
- Three Iranian Cyber Actors, Conspiracy to Obtain, Washington D.C. 2026 · Washington
- Mohammad Reza Espargham, Conspiracy to Commit, Washington D.C. 2026 · Washington
- Mojtaba Masoumpour, Conspiracy to Commit, Washington D.C. 2026 · Washington
- Hossein Parvar, Conspiracy to Commit, Washington D.C. 2026 · Washington

