
US busts network that helped North Koreans obtain remote IT work
US Justice Department
said Monday it has taken down a network that allegedly helped North Koreans obtain remote IT work with companies to raise funds for the sanctioned Asian country's weapons program.
A US national,
Zhenxing Wang
of New Jersey, has been arrested and six Chinese nationals and two Taiwan citizens have been indicted for their alleged roles in the scheme, the department said in a statement.
Wang and his co-conspirators are accused in an indictment of helping North Koreans obtain remote information technology work with US companies that generated more than $5 million in revenue.
The Justice Department said the defendants compromised the identities of more than 80 US individuals to obtain remote IT jobs at more than 100 US companies, including many Fortune 500 firms.
The remote North Korean workers received regular salary payments and in some cases stole sensitive employer information such as export controlled US military technology and virtual currency, it said.
"These schemes target and steal from US companies and are designed to evade sanctions and fund the North Korean regime's illicit programs, including its weapons programs," Assistant Attorney General John Eisenberg said.
US Attorney Leah Foley said the "threat posed by (North Korean) operatives is both real and immediate.
"Thousands of North Korean
cyber operatives
have been trained and deployed by the regime to blend into the global digital workforce and systematically target US companies," Foley said.
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