Picture of the author

Crypto Deals

06/10 02:54

North Korea Laundered $7.7M in Crypto: DOJ Reveals

North Korea Laundered $7.7M in Crypto: DOJ Reveals 
The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) has seized over $7.74 million in cryptocurrency allegedly laundered by North Korean IT workers posing as remote employees at U.S. and international companies. This operation, exposed through a civil forfeiture complaint filed in the District of Columbia, reveals how North Korea has been exploiting the crypto and AI boom to bypass U.S. sanctions and fund its weapons programs.


Fake Resumes, AI Tools, and NFT Laundering
According to the DOJ, the operatives used stolen or fake IDs to bypass KYC checks and secure work under assumed identities. They often received their payments in U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoins. The laundering strategy involved sophisticated crypto techniques, mixing funds, converting between tokens, buying NFTs, and transferring assets in small amounts to avoid detection.

The operatives routed the funds through known intermediaries, including Sim Hyon Sop of the sanctioned Foreign Trade Bank and Kim Sang Man of Chinyong IT Cooperation Company.

AI’s Alarming Role in the Scheme
OpenAI confirmed that several accounts linked to North Korean clusters were banned for using AI tools like ChatGPT to automate job applications, craft fake employment histories, and even research targets. Some operatives ran “laptop farms,” simulating normal work behavior from countries like Russia and Laos. Google had previously taken similar steps, removing North Korea-linked accounts.

Meanwhile, tech firms like Google and OpenAI have shut down multiple accounts linked to North Korean deception campaigns.


Part of Ongoing Crackdown on DPRK’s Digital Networks

This seizure follows the DOJ’s broader DPRK RevGen initiative launched in March 2024, aimed at disrupting North Korea’s growing cyber-financial operations. “US Sanctions are in place for a reason,” said U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro. “We will continue to investigate and prosecute anyone helping North Korea fund its illegal weapons programs.”

Despite a slower pace under the Trump administration, Thursday’s action signals the U.S. is far from easing up on North Korea’s crypto-powered sanctions evasion.
IMG-20250606-WA0017.jpg
#Share Your Thoughts on Popular Assets in June#Check In to Win a 20g Gold Bar#Claim1,200 USDT in the Monthly Creation Challenge
1Share

All Comments0LatestHot

avatar
LatestHot