A federal court in St Louis has indicted 14 North Koreans for allegedly being part of a long-running conspiracy aimed at extorting funds from US companies and funneling money to Pyongyang’s weapons programmes.

The wider scheme allegedly involves thousands of North Korean IT workers who use false, stolen, and borrowed identities from people in the US and other countries to get hired and work remotely for US firms.

The indictement says the defendants and others working with them generated at least $88m (£51.5m) for the North Korean regime over a six-year period.

[…]

The prosecutors say the suspects worked for two North Korean-controlled companies - China-based Yanbian Silverstar and Russia-based Volasys Silverstar.

[…]

You are viewing a single thread.
View all comments View context
3 points

These aren’t ‘common’ IT workers seeking a job but spies working for North Korea as the article says. What should I elaborate here?

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point
*
Removed by mod
permalink
report
parent
reply

U.S. News

!usnews@beehaw.org

Create post

News about and pertaining to the United States and its people.

Please read what’s functionally the mission statement before posting for the first time. We have a narrower definition of news than you might be accustomed to.


Guidelines for submissions:
  • Post the original source of information as the link.
  • If there is any Nazi imagery in the linked story, mark your post NSFW.
  • If there is a paywall, provide an archive link in the body.
  • Post using the original headline; edits for clarity (as in providing crucial info a clickbait hed omits) are fine.
  • Social media is not a news source.

For World News, see the News community.


This community’s icon was made by Aaron Schneider, under the CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.

Community stats

  • 685

    Monthly active users

  • 323

    Posts

  • 444

    Comments