Photos of bank robbers used to line the walls of post offices across the US as part of the FBI's "Most Wanted" lists. You may not notice them when you have the occasion to walk into your local post office, but the Most Wanted lists are alive and well. Those lists have entered the digital age on the FBI's website, and there's a whole category dedicated to the top five most wanted cybercriminals. Most of these cases are years old (some extending back to 1996) and, by today's cybercrime standards, some are downright quaint. Still, even ripping a few thousand people off on eBay can get the FBI's attention, so we thought we'd take a look at the FBI's top five most wanted cybercriminals are and what they did to get on the list.

William Charles Rath

Goes by: Bill

Current age: 69

From: Canada

FBI charges: Conspiracy to commit fraud and related activity in connection with access devices; producing, using and trafficking in counterfeit access devices; conspiracy to launder money

Short description of crime: Making satellite boxes that allowed people to steal service without paying

The Federal Grand Jury indicted Rath in 2001 on the three above charges. Rath is accused of creating illegal satellite boxes and selling them in North America, allowing people to get satellite service without paying. He allegedly defrauded satellite providers out of "millions of dollars" between 1996 and 1999 and remains at large today.

Claudiu Virgil Turlea

Goes by: Biggy/Bigs

Current age: 31

From: Romania

FBI charges: Conspiracy to commit wire fraud, bank fraud, and computer fraud, as well as conspiracy laundering of monetary instruments

Short description of crime: Being involved in a series of fraud/hacking schemes

In 2008, Turlea was charged and an arrest warrant was issued for being part of a "criminal enterprise organization" that is accused of defrauding users out of $4.3 million. According to the FBI, Turlea's organization did pretty much anything for cash: they allegedly obtained login credentials to transfer cash from various bank accounts, created a fake online auction site where users would bid on nonexistent items, and more. The FBI claims Turlea is a "known" member of a Romanian organized crime group and could possibly be hiding in Canada.

Tobechi Enyinna Onwuhara

Goes by: T/Tobe

Current age: 30

From: Nigeria

FBI charges: Conspiracy to commit bank fraud

Short description of crime: Stealing people's identities to gain access to their bank details and wire the money elsewhere

According to the FBI, Onwuhara is already a convicted felon who has allegedly been involved in a crime ring with other Nigerians since 2005. The group supposedly got into people's Home Equity Line of Credit (HLOC) accounts using their stolen identities and then wired the money to other accounts, defrauding banks out of "tens of millions of dollars," according to the FBI. A warrant for his arrest was issued in 2008 and some of his other cohorts have already been arrested. As an interesting side note, Onwuhara is apparently a strip club aficionado and loves gambling. (But what about long walks on the beach?)

Saad Echouafni

Goes by: Jay

Current age: 43

From: Morocco

FBI charges: Computer intrusion

Short description of crime: Hiring "hackers" to attack his business competitors

Echouafni was indicted by a Federal Grand Jury in 2005 for allegedly hiring a group of hackers to launch an attack against his satellite communication company's competitors. According to the FBI, this was the first successful investigation into a large-scale DDoS attack carried out for commercial purposes in the US. One of Echouafni's competitors was taken down for nearly two weeks at the time—that company and others saw losses of up to $1 million during the period they were offline. The FBI thinks Echouafni might be in Morocco and warns that he may be armed and dangerous. Apparently no walks on the beach for this guy.

Jie Dong

Goes by: N/A

Current age: 46 (but looks about 21, judging by his photo)

From: Nobody knows! (Asian descent)

FBI charges: Mail and wire fraud

Short description of crime: Being an auction site deadbeat

Dong has been out on a federal arrest warrant since 2004 for defrauding users of an unnamed auction site out of $800,000 in late 2003. He sold items and collected payment from winning bidders, but never shipped to his 5,000 buyers. The FBI thinks Dong may have fled to China or Hong Kong.