DOJ Shuts Down North Korea’s Cyber-Backed Weapons Financing Network
- U.S. DOJ disrupts North Korean cybercrime network infiltrating 136 U.S. firms via fake IT workers, generating $2.2 million in illicit revenue for Pyongyang's weapons programs. - Five individuals, including U.S. citizens and a Ukrainian national, pleaded guilty to enabling APT38's operations through stolen identities and proxy computers hosted in U.S. residences. - DOJ seized $15 million in USDT linked to 2023 crypto heists by APT38, which has stolen over $2 billion globally in 2025 alone, according to El
The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) has announced a major enforcement action against a North Korean cybercrime network that infiltrated 136 American businesses by posing as remote IT workers, generating $2.2 million in illegal profits for the regime. This scheme, run by North Korean agents pretending to be U.S.-based technology professionals with stolen identities, has been traced to the APT38 hacking group, notorious for its large-scale cryptocurrency thefts. The DOJ’s efforts have resulted in guilty pleas from five people—four Americans and one Ukrainian—and the confiscation of $15 million in
The operation saw North Korean IT operatives using fake identities, counterfeit Social Security numbers, and U.S.-based proxy computers to land remote jobs at American firms. Facilitators such as U.S. Army veteran Alexander Paul Travis and Ukrainian Oleksandr Didenko supplied stolen identities and managed company laptops, helping the operatives evade employment screening. Didenko, who sold U.S. identities to North Korean actors, has agreed to surrender $1.4 million as part of his plea agreement.
In a related move, the DOJ targeted APT38’s cryptocurrency thefts, seizing $15 million in USDT from 2023 attacks on crypto platforms in Estonia, Panama, and the Seychelles. These assets were funneled through mixers and over-the-counter brokers before being frozen by U.S. officials. APT38, a North Korean military cyber unit,
U.S. Attorney Jason A. Reding Quiñones stressed the government’s determination to cut off North Korea’s financial lifelines, declaring, “We will not allow [North Korea] to fund its weapons programs by exploiting American businesses and workers.” Assistant Attorney General John A. Eisenberg noted that the DOJ is pursuing not only hackers but also the intermediaries who facilitate global crypto-related crimes. The DOJ has also launched the Scam Center Strike Force to address broader Asian cyber-fraud rings, signaling a unified international response.
This enforcement action comes after U.S. and U.K. authorities warned of the escalating threat from North Korean cyber activities. In October, both countries imposed sanctions on criminal groups in Cambodia and Laos involved in crypto laundering. The DOJ’s measures reflect a new focus on dismantling the systems that enable illicit funding, with more arrests and international operations anticipated.
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