An Israeli government cybersecurity official was reportedly arrested recently by Las Vegas police and other authorities in Nevada who were conducting an undercover investigation aimed at online users seeking to sexually prey on children.
Tom Artiom Alexandrovich, 38, faces felony charges of luring a child with a computer for a sex act, alongside several other suspects who were apprehended during the two-week sting operation, the Las Vegas metropolitan police department said in a statement published on Friday. He has since evidently been released from custody and returned to Israel.
As first reported by the news site Mediaite, a publicly posted screenshot of Alexandrovichâs page on the LinkedIn professional networking platform described him as the executive director of the Israel Cyber Directorate, an Israeli government agency under the purview of prime minister Benjamin Netanyahuâs office.
The screenshot also showed a post under Alexandrovichâs name alluding to his having been in Las Vegas earlier in August for the Black Hat Briefings, a yearly meeting of cybersecurity professionals.
âTwo things you canât escape at Black Hat 2025: the relentless buz of generative [artificial intelligence] and the sound of Hebrew ⊠in every corridor,â Alexandrovich wrote in part in an accompanying post. Invoking an abbreviation for large language models and referring to one of Israelâs largest cities, the post continued: âThe key takeaway? The future of cybersecurity is being written in code, and it seems a significant part of it is being authored in #TelAviv and powered by LLMs. An exciting time to be in the field!â
That LinkedIn page under Alexandrovichâs name has since been deleted.
The Israeli news outlet Ynet reported on Wednesday that the US had detained âan employee of the Israel National Cyber Directorateâ for interrogation while he was representing his country at a professional conference. That employee then returned to his hotel and flew back to Israel two days later.
âIsraeli officials downplayed the incident, saying it carried âno political implicationsâ and was resolved quickly,â Ynet reported, without naming Alexandrovich or mentioning he had been arrested in connection with a felony charge leveled against him by Nevada law enforcement officials. âThe reasons for the questioning remain unclear but may relate to the employeeâs conduct.â
Mediaite reported that Netanyahuâs office issued a statement denying that the employee in question had even been arrested.
âA state employee who traveled to the US for professional matters was questioned by American authorities during his stay,â the prime ministerâs office said. âThe employee, who does not hold a diplomatic visa, was not arrested and returned to Israel as scheduled.â
Nevadaâs internet crime against children taskforce helmed the operation which resulted in the arrests of Alexandrovich and seven other men in the city of Henderson, which is near Las Vegas. All eight suspects were brought to jail after their arrests, said the statement from the Las Vegas metropolitan police department, which participated in the operation alongside local, state and federal law enforcement officials.
Under Nevada law, luring a child with a computer for a sex act can carry between one and 10 years in prison.