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From Trafficking Victim to Cybercrime Whistleblower

Feb 24, 2026 | 9:00am ET | 2:00pm GMT | 60 minutes

Join us on February 24 as we connect a survivor’s firsthand testimony to the tactics being used right now, including how AI makes scams feel more real than ever, and what you can do to stay safe.

You’ll hear from Mohammad Muzahir (“Red Bull”), a whistleblower who escaped a scam compound and helped shed light on what goes on inside. He'll be joined by leaders in cybersecurity and national security who’ll break down the big picture in simple terms.

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"I promised myself, whether I stay alive or not, I will stop this scam."

- Mohammad Muzahir 
(from Andy Greenberg’s expose in WIRED)

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Mohammad “Red Bull” Muzahir

Mohammad Muhazir, “Red Bull,” is a survivor of human trafficking who was trapped inside a Laos scam compound and forced to run online fraud operations. He risked his life to become a whistleblower, secretly leaking thousands of pages of internal materials to WIRED before escaping. Today, his mission is to inspire other "Red Bulls" to step out of the shadows and come forward. By educating the public on the inner workings of these syndicates, he seeks to ensure that no one else suffers his fate—whether as a victim of the traffickers or a target of their scams.

Huntress platform

Andy Greenberg

Andy Greenberg is a senior writer for WIRED covering hacking, cybersecurity, and surveillance. He’s the author of the books Tracers in the Dark: The Global Hunt for the Crime Lords of Cryptocurrency and Sandworm: A New Era of Cyberwar and the Hunt for the Kremlin's Most Dangerous Hackers. His books and excerpts from them published in WIRED have won awards including two Gerald Loeb Awards for distinguished business and financial reporting, a Sigma Delta Chi Award from the Society of Professional Journalists, and the Cornelius Ryan Citation for Excellence from the Overseas Press Club. Greenberg works in WIRED’s New York office.

Read his full reporting on “Red Bull” here.

Huntress platform

Jen Easterly

Jen Easterly is a Strategic Advisor to Huntress and CEO of RSAC, the premier global platform for the cybersecurity community. A cybersecurity pioneer, combat veteran, and national security leader, she brings more than three decades of experience across government and the private sector. Most recently, she served as Director of CISA, leading efforts to defend U.S. critical infrastructure and strengthen public-private cyber resilience. She previously built Morgan Stanley’s Cybersecurity Fusion Center, helped stand up U.S. Cyber Command, and commanded the Army’s first cyber battalion. A West Point graduate and Rhodes Scholar, she is a globally recognized voice on cybersecurity, resilience, and secure-by-design innovation.


Huntress platform

Kyle Hanslovan

Kyle Hanslovan is the co-founder and CEO of Huntress, a cybersecurity company that protects 99% of businesses outside the Fortune 1000 from emerging cyberthreats. A former U.S. Air Force cyber warfare operator and NSA operative, Kyle built Huntress to defend the 99% of businesses that form the backbone of the global economy but remain under-protected. Under his leadership, Huntress has grown into a category-defining force in cybersecurity, combining human-led threat hunting with modern security technology to stop hackers before they cause harm.

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Additional Resources

Step inside the dark world of cybercrime

Join us on March 18 (12pm EST) for _declassified, a raw intel drop where John Hammond and Jim Browning break down how modern cybercrime runs like a real business.

Get to know pig butchering

Pig butchering scams might not be as brutal as they sound, but the emotional and financial damage is very real. Scammers earn your trust, often by faking relationships, before pushing a “too-good-to-be-true” investment. Know the warning signs so you can spot it early and protect your money.

Dive deeper into deepfakes

AI is making scams more convincing, personal, and harder to spot. This resource explains where deepfakes are being used in the real world, how to see through them, and why human verification is still your best bet.