US ‘laptop farm’ man accused of outsourcing his IT jobs to North Koreans to raise funds for weapons

US 'laptop farm' man accused of outsourcing his IT jobs to North Koreans to raise funds for weapons

August 8, 2024 at 05:03PM

The FBI arrested Matthew Isaac Knoot, a Tennessee man, for running a “laptop farm” scheme that outsourced IT jobs to North Koreans while posing as a US citizen. The scheme allegedly helped fund Pyongyang’s weapons programs and earned over $250,000 per job. Knoot faces charges that could lead to 20 years in prison.

From the meeting notes, the key takeaways are:

– FBI arrested Matthew Isaac Knoot, a Tennessee man suspected of running a “laptop farm” that provided North Koreans with IT jobs at American and British companies.
– Knoot is alleged to have defrauded multiple US and UK companies by applying for remote technology jobs and then outsourcing the work to North Koreans, using a stolen identity.
– The laptops were set up so that North Koreans could remotely log in and do the work, allegedly generating over $250,000 per job and funneling the money to the North Korean and Chinese accounts to fund the Kim Jong Un government.
– Knoot was paid every month by a person named Yang Di for keeping his part of the scam running.
– Knoot faces a variety of charges, including conspiracy to unlawfully employ foreigners, and could face up to 20 years in prison, with a minimum of two years if convicted for aggravated identity theft.

The notes also mention the FBI’s ongoing efforts to disrupt and dismantle similar laptop farm operations, including a previous case involving an Arizona woman who allegedly made $6.8 million through a similar scheme.

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