Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) has extended a pause in vehicle production for at least another week following a cyber attack by the Scattered Lapsus$ Hunters hacking collective comprising members of the Scattered Spider, ShinyHunters, and Lapsus$ gangs.
The incident, which began at the end of August before becoming public on 2 September, forced the suspension of work at JLR’s Merseyside plant and has also affected its retail services.
It has since emerged that data of an undisclosed nature has been compromised by the cyber gang – which has been boasting of its exploits on Telegram but has also now claimed to have retired – and notified the relevant regulators. Its forensic investigation continues.
A JLR spokesperson said: “Today we have informed colleagues, suppliers and partners that we have extended the current pause in our production until Wednesday 24 September 2025.
“We have taken this decision as our forensic investigation of the cyber incident continues, and as we consider the different stages of the controlled restart of our global operations, which will take time.
“We are very sorry for the continued disruption this incident is causing and we will continue to update as the investigation progresses,” they said.
James McQuiggan, CISO advisor at KnowBe4, said the continuing disruption at JLR demonstrated how entwined cyber security and wider business resilience have now become.
“When core systems are taken offline, the impact cascades through employees, suppliers and customers, showing that business continuity and cyber defence should be indivisible,” he said. “Beyond immediate disruption, data theft during such incidents increases the long-term risks, from reputational damage to regulatory consequences.”
“To mitigate these risks, organisations should regularly test and update their business continuity and incident response plans, strengthen supply chain risk assessments, and adopt zero-trust principles to limit attacker movement.”
McQuiggan added: “Just as important is addressing human risk, as social engineering remains the leading entry point for attackers. Ongoing security awareness, phishing simulations, and behavior analysis of users in a human risk management program help users recognise and resist malicious tactics. By combining strong technical controls with a culture of cyber resilience, organisations can reduce their exposure and recover with greater confidence.”
Golden parachutes
Meanwhile, the supposed Scattered Lapsus$ Hunters shutdown – announced via BreachForums and Telegram across a number of frequently crude postings – saw ‘farewell’ messages that included a number of apologies to the families of some gang members scooped up in law enforcement actions, to JLR, and to Google and CrowdStrike.
In the messages, reviewed by CyberNews, one of the supposed gang members even addressed the CIA, saying they were “so very sorry” they leaked classified documents and “had no idea what they were doing”.
“Please forgive me and f*** Iran. I will be going to the rehab center for 60 days,” they added.
The gang’s alleged climbdown has drawn a sceptical eye from cyber community members who, based on years of experience, know that cyber criminals rarely if ever pack up shop and go straight.
Cian Heasley, principal consultant at Acumen Cyber, said that the gang’s talk of activating “contingency plans” and a call for fans not to worry about them as they would be enjoying their “golden parachutes with the millions the group accumulated [sic]”, seemed far-fetched.
“This is a transparent move that suggests its members are buying some breathing time, panicking about the threat of prison, and arguing behind the scenes about how much trouble they are actually in and the need to be cautious,” said Heasley.
“Given the volatile and explosive nature of the group, it’s hard to imagine they carried out this level of due diligence.
“The lure of the money and excitement that comes with cyber crime will inevitably draw them back in eventually,” added Heasley.
Indeed, even amid its farewell messages, Scattered Lapsus$ Hunters hinted at future developments and taunted the likes of the FBI and Mandiant, and various victims including luxury goods house Kering and Air France.
It also named British Airlines, an organisation that does not exist but which may be a reference to British Airways (BA).
BA is not known to have been attacked at the time of writing, suggesting that more victims of the recent hacking spree may yet come to light.
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