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Scrape Timestamp (UTC): 2024-08-08 21:00:17.713
Source: https://www.theregister.com/2024/08/08/north_korea_laptop_farm_arrest/
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US 'laptop farm' man accused of outsourcing his IT jobs to North Koreans to raise funds for weapons. American and Brit firms thought they were employing a Westerner, but not so, it's alleged. The FBI today arrested a Tennessee man suspected of running a "laptop farm" that got North Koreans, posing as Westerners, IT jobs at American and British companies. It's claimed this swindle helped generate cash to fund Pyongyang's weapons programs. According to US prosecutors, Matthew Isaac Knoot, 38, of Nashville, defrauded multiple US and UK companies by applying for remote technology jobs, and then secretly outsourced those jobs to North Koreans. From July 2022 to August 2023, Knoot worked at an unspecified number of "US media, technology, and financial companies," who thought they had hired a one Andrew M, a US citizen whose identity was stolen by the Tennessean, it is claimed. Those firms allegedly sent Knoot work laptops that he subsequently set up so that Norks could remotely log into them and do his work for him. That would be the alleged laptop farm. It saves having to ship PCs off to North Korea and have people there use VPNs or equivalent to cover up the true location of the machines. Instead, as the Dept of Justice alleges, the laptops were pooled in the US by Knoot, North Korean ghost workers connected in remotely from their country to do the work he was tasked with, and as far as the UK and US employers were concerned, they were employing a guy in America using American broadband. It's claimed that each of those outsourced jobs raked in more than $250,000, and that money went via North Korean and Chinese accounts to the Kim Jong Un government. The North Korean regime's industrial-scale use of laptop farming generates hundreds of millions annually, and exists to fund the impoverished hermit nation's programs to develop weapons of mass destruction, according to the Justice Dept. Knoot was allegedly paid every month by a person named Yang Di for keeping his part of the scam running; prosecutors doesn't go into too much detail about who Di is, merely saying that he paid Knoot and that he was involved to some degree. The alleged swindle may have chugged along to this day and beyond, were it not for the Feds searching Knoot's home and shutting down what's said to be a laptop farm in August last year. It goes unsaid how long ago the FBI caught wind of Knoot's alleged misdeeds, though it might have something to do with the Nashville resident allegedly reporting his income to the IRS in Andrew M's name. It's possible the tax agency thought it was a little weird that one person was working multiple six-figure jobs at the same time. In addition to allegedly siphoning all that employment income from the defrauded firms, investigations into Knoot and Di and subsequent clean up work apparently cost those businesses half a million bucks. Knoot is charged with a variety of crimes, including conspiracy to unlawfully employ foreigners. The Tennessee citizen could face up to 20 years in prison, with a minimum of two years if he's at least convicted for aggravated identity theft. The Feds have been working to disrupt and dismantle despotic Kim's laptop farms for some time now. In May, an Arizona woman was snared for allegedly infiltrating over 300 companies to acquire jobs for North Koreans. Her scheme made $6.8 million, allegedly.
Daily Brief Summary
Matthew Isaac Knoot from Nashville, Tennessee, was arrested for operating a fraudulent scheme, outsourcing IT jobs to North Korean workers under the guise of being an American employee.
Knoot allegedly created a "laptop farm" where laptops sent by U.S. and UK companies were used by North Koreans to remotely perform outsourced jobs, deceiving the companies into believing they were employing a U.S. citizen.
This operation generated over $250,000 per job, funneling money through North Korean and Chinese accounts directly to finance North Korea's weapons development programs.
The elaborate scheme involved identity theft, using the credentials of an American, Andrew M, allowing North Koreans to pose as U.S. workers and bypass geographical work limitations.
The U.S. Department of Justice claims this is part of North Korea's larger strategy of using fraudulent employment to fund its weapon of mass destruction programs.
Investigations into the operations led by Knoot and the subsequent required remediation have cost the affected companies an excess of half a million dollars.
Knoot faces serious charges including conspiracy to unlawfully employ foreigners and aggravated identity theft, potentially leading to a 20-year prison sentence.