US sanctions North Korea IT Worker Crypto fraud ring


The U.S. Treasury Department approved two people and four entities involved in North Korea-operated IT workers’ rings, which will penetrate crypto companies to exploit them.

Treasury Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) explain On Tuesday, it approved North Korea’s song Kum Hyok allegedly stealing information from U.S. citizens for use as an alias and handing it over to hired foreign IT workers who will seek employment at U.S. companies.

OFAC also approved Russian national Asatryan to use his company to hire dozens of North Korean IT workers under a long-term agreement signed with North Korea trading companies in 2024.

source: Ministry of Finance

More and more fraudulent tech workers are linked to North Korea, officially the Democratic Republic of Korea (DPRK) Expand their penetration operationsIn Google’s April report, the program’s infrastructure has spread worldwide.

“The Treasury remains committed to using all available tools to undermine the Kim regime’s efforts to mimic Americans and malicious cyberattacks through its digital asset theft,” said Michael Faulkender, deputy secretary of the Treasury.

Thousands of IT workers fund missile programs with wealthier countries

OFAC said North Korea aims to generate revenue for its ballistic missile program by deploying a thousand labor force of highly skilled IT workers around the world, most of which are located in China and Russia.

The workforce is primarily targeted at employers in wealthier countries and uses a variety of mainstream and industry-specific online platforms, the OFAC said.