U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration has lifted sanctions on three executives tied to the spy software consortium Intellexa, according to a notice published to the U.S. Treasury’s website.
Rolling Back Biden’s Crackdown
The move partially reverses Biden-era sanctions on Intellexa, a spyware group the Treasury previously labeled a “complex international web” of invasive surveillance.
A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that the removal “was done as part of the normal administrative process in response to a petition request for reconsideration.” The official added that each of the individuals had “demonstrated measures to separate themselves from the Intellexa Consortium.”
Intellexa representatives did not immediately respond to email messages requesting comment.
The notice said sanctions were lifted on Sara Hamou, whom the U.S. government accused of providing managerial services to Intellexa, Andrea Gambazzi, whose company was alleged by the U.S. government to have held the distribution rights to the Predator spyware, and Merom Harpaz, described by U.S. officials as a top executive in the consortium.
Global Security Concerns
The Intellexa consortium’s flagship “Predator” spyware is at the center of a scandal over the alleged surveillance of a journalist, a prominent opposition figure and dozens of others in Greece, while in 2023 a group of investigative news outlets reported that the Vietnamese government had tried to hack members of the U.S. Congress using Intellexa’s tools.
Dilian has previously denied any involvement or wrongdoing in the Greek case, and has not commented publicly on the attempted hacking of U.S. lawmakers.
In its initial wave of sanctions issued in March of last year, the U.S. government accused Intellexa of enabling “the proliferation of commercial spyware and surveillance technologies” to authoritarian regimes and alleged that its software had been used “in an effort to covertly surveil U.S. government officials, journalists, and policy experts.”
(With inputs from Reuters)




