đź“° Full Story
The U.S. Department of Justice on April 15 announced prison terms for two New Jersey men who helped a North Korean government-run operation place remote IT workers inside American companies.
Kejia (Tony) Wang, 42, was sentenced to 108 months and Zhenxing (Danny) Wang, 39, to 92 months after pleading guilty to conspiracy charges including wire fraud, money laundering and identity theft.
Prosecutors say the men ran or hosted so‑called “laptop farms,” created shell companies and used the stolen identities of at least 80 U.S. residents to secure jobs for North Korean operatives at more than 100 U.S. firms, including Fortune 500 companies and a California-based defense contractor.
The scheme generated roughly $5 million for the DPRK and inflicted an estimated $3 million in remediation and legal costs on victim firms; the defendants and co‑facilitators collected about $696,000, of which $600,000 was ordered forfeited.
Court filings say one overseas worker accessed export‑controlled data.
Authorities continue to seek additional co‑conspirators and have offered rewards for information.








đź’¬ Commentary