
💼 American woman helped North Korea earn $17 million – gets 8.5 years in prison
Arizona resident Kristina Marie Chapman has been sentenced to 102 months in prison for her role in a large-scale scheme that helped North Korea earn about $17 million.
What did she do?
Chapman assisted North Korean IT specialists in posing as U.S.-based freelancers and getting hired by over 300 American companies, including major Fortune 500 firms. She:
- provided stolen personal data and fake documents;
- registered fake accounts and digital wallets;
- shipped computers and devices, including to China – near the North Korean border;
- stored more than 90 devices linked to the scheme in her home.
The profits were partly used to fund North Korea’s nuclear program. Under the guise of remote work, the hackers not only got paid in dollars but also managed to bypass international sanctions.
⚖️ How did it end?
Chapman will now spend 8.5 years in federal prison and must pay nearly $500,000 in restitution. Her case has become one of the most striking examples of how the North Korean regime uses freelancing and the IT industry to generate revenue in defiance of global sanctions.
As U.S. federal prosecutor Jeanine Ferris Pirro stated while commenting on the sentence:
“If it happened to the biggest American banks, automakers, and tech corporations – make no mistake, it can happen to you too.”
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