The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: April 01, 2025
Today: April 01, 2025

North Korean nationals indicted in scheme using IT workers to funnel money for weapons programs

December 12, 2024
JIM SALTER - AP

ST. LOUIS (AP) โ€” Fourteen North Korean nationals have been indicted in a scheme using information technology workers with false identities to contract with U.S. companies โ€” workers who then funneled their wages to North Korea for development of ballistic missiles and other weapons, the head of the FBI office in St. Louis said Thursday.

The scheme involving thousands of IT workers generated more than $88 million for the North Korean government, Ashley T. Johnson, special agent in charge of the St. Louis FBI office, said at a news conference. In addition to their wages, the workers stole sensitive information from companies or threatened to leak information in exchange for extortion payments, Johnson said.

Victims included defrauded companies and people whose identities were stolen from across the U.S., including Missouri, Johnson said. The indictments were filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court in St. Louis. All 14 people face wire fraud, money laundering, identity theft and other charges.

Most of those accused are believed to be in North Korea. Johnson acknowledged that bringing them to justice will be difficult. To help, the U.S. Department of State is offering a $5 million reward for information leading to any of the suspects.

Federal authorities said the scheme worked like this:

North Korea dispatched thousands of IT workers to get hired and work remotely or as freelancers for U.S. companies. The IT workers involved in the scheme sometimes used stolen identities. In other instances, they paid Americans to use their home Wi-Fi connections, or to pose in on-camera job interviews as the IT workers. Johnson said the FBI is going after those โ€œdomestic enablers,โ€ too.

โ€œThis is just the tip of the iceberg,โ€ Johnson said. โ€œIf your company has hired fully remote IT workers, more likely than not, you have hired or at least interviewed a North Korean national working on behalf of the North Korean government,โ€ Johnson said.

The Justice Department in recent years has sought to expose and disrupt a broad variety of criminal schemes aimed at bolstering the North Korean regime, including its nuclear weapons program.

In 2021, the Justice Department charged three North Korean computer programmers and members of the governmentโ€™s military intelligence agency in a broad range of global hacks that officials say were carried out at the behest of the regime. Law enforcement officials said at the time that the prosecution highlighted the profit-driven motive behind North Koreaโ€™s criminal hacking, a contrast from other adversarial nations like Russia, China and Iran that are generally more interested in espionage, intellectual property theft or even disrupting democracy.

In May 2022, the State Department, Department of the Treasury, and the FBI issued an advisory warning of attempts by North Koreans โ€œto obtain employment while posing as non-North Korean nationals.โ€ The advisory noted that in recent years, the regime of Kim Jong Un โ€œhas placed increased focus on education and trainingโ€ in IT-related subjects.

In October 2023, the FBI in St. Louis announced the seizure of $1.5 million and 17 domain names as part of the investigation. The indictments announced Tuesday were the first stemming from the investigation.

Johnson urged companies to thoroughly vet IT workers hired to work remotely. โ€œOne of the ways to help minimize your risk is to insist current and future IT workers appear on camera as often as possible if they are fully remote,โ€ she said.

Officials didnโ€™t name the companies that unknowingly hired North Korean workers.

Related Articles

India arrests man accused of running $96 billion crypto exchange at request of US Cuts to US foreign aid are hurting efforts to tackle human trafficking at scam compounds. Americans may pay the price Cybercrime crew stole then resold hundreds of tickets to Swift concerts, prosecutors say Cyberattacks are on the rise, and they're costing us billions of dollars
Share This

Popular

Business|Economy|Finance|Political|US

A Senate vote to reverse Trump's tariffs on Canada is testing Republican support

A Senate vote to reverse Trump's tariffs on Canada is testing Republican support
Business|Economy|Political|US

Expert predicts what will happen if Trump imposes sweeping tariffs

Expert predicts what will happen if Trump imposes sweeping tariffs
Asia|Business|Economy|Finance|Political

Asia's factory activity weakens as US tariffs sap confidence

Asia's factory activity weakens as US tariffs sap confidence
Asia|Business|Economy|Finance|Political|Stock Markets

Stocks stabilise, gold hits record before Trump tariff reveal

Stocks stabilise, gold hits record before Trump tariff reveal

Crime

Crime|US

Restraining order petition provides new details in case of Hawaii doctor charged with trying to kill his wife

Restraining order petition provides new details in case of Hawaii doctor charged with trying to kill his wife
Asia|Business|Crime|Economy|World

Bangkok reviews construction safety after a high-rise was crumpled by an earthquake 800 miles away

Bangkok reviews construction safety after a high-rise was crumpled by an earthquake 800 miles away
Crime|Political|US

Fire at New Mexico GOP headquarters under investigation as arson

Fire at New Mexico GOP headquarters under investigation as arson
Crime|Travel|US

Air traffic controller arrested after โ€˜incidentโ€™ at Washington DC area control tower

Air traffic controller arrested after โ€˜incidentโ€™ at Washington DC area control tower

Access this article for free.

Already have an account? Sign In