Two American citizens, Matthew Isaac Knoot and Erick Ntekereze Prince, have been sentenced to 18 months in prison each for their roles in a scheme that generated over $1.2 million for North Korea. They hosted laptops at their residences, which were then used by North Korean scammers to remotely access U.S. companies' systems. This operation compromised nearly 70 victim companies and facilitated illicit revenue generation for the sanctioned regime. AI
IMPACT Highlights the use of remote access tools in state-sponsored cybercrime, potentially impacting IT security protocols for remote workforces.
RANK_REASON Sentences handed down for facilitating a scheme that generated revenue for a sanctioned foreign regime. [lever_c_demoted from significant: ic=2 ai=0.4]
- Erick Ntekereze Prince
- Jason A. Reding Quiñones
- John A. Eisenberg
- Matthew Isaac Knoot
- Nashville
- New York
- North Korea
- Remote Desktop Protocol
- United States Department of Justice
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