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The U.S. Department of Justice has charged three North Koreans for stealing $1.3 billion in money and cryptocurrency in attacks on banks, the entertainment industry, cryptocurrency companies, and more.
The defendants are state-sponsored North Korean hackers and members of Reconnaissance General Bureau (RGB) units, a North Korean military intelligence agency that has engaged in criminal hacking operations.
“These North Korean military hacking units are known by multiple names in the cybersecurity community, including Lazarus Group and Advanced Persistent Threat 38 (APT38),” the DOJ said.
According to DOJ, the three North Koreans have been “participating in a wide-ranging criminal conspiracy to conduct a series of destructive cyberattacks, to steal and extort more than $1.3 billion of money and cryptocurrency from financial institutions and companies, to create and deploy multiple malicious cryptocurrency applications, and to develop and fraudulently market a blockchain platform.”
The US indicted Jon Chang Hyok (전창혁), Kim Il (김일), and Park Jin Hyok (박진혁), with Park previously indicted in September 2018 for being a part of a “wide-ranging, multi-year conspiracy to conduct computer intrusions and commit wire fraud by co-conspirators working on behalf of the government of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.”
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The Lazarus Group (tracked by the US as HIDDEN COBRA) is known for targeting high-profile orgs such as Sony Pictures Entertainment and multiple banks worldwide.
Their hacking campaign allowed them to steal hundreds of millions of US dollars, for instance, getting away with roughly $140 million by breaching Bangladesh Bank [1, 2], Banco de Chile, and the Far Eastern International Bank of Taiwan.
The North Korean-backed hackers were indicted for multiple hacking activities, including:
The indictment alleges that the hacking group’s goal was to “further the strategic and financial interests of the DPRK government and its leader, Kim Jong Un” by causing damage, as well as stealing data and money from organizations all over the globe.
“The Department’s criminal charges are uniquely credible forms of attribution — we can prove these allegations beyond a reasonable doubt using only unclassified, admissible evidence,” Assistant Attorney General John C. Demers said. “And they are the only way in which the Department speaks.”
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The United Nations estimated in 2019 that North Korea has generated as much as $2 billion from at least 35 cyberattacks targeting banks and cryptocurrency exchanges across over a dozen countries.
Another United Nations report from 2019 said that DPRK-backed hackers hitting Asian cryptocurrency exchanges between January 2017 and September 2018 were believed to be behind $571 million in financial losses.
“This revenue allows the North Korean regime to continue to invest in its illicit ballistic missile and nuclear programs,” the Justice Department said.
Also in 2019, the U.S. Treasury also sanctioned three North Korean hacking groups (Lazarus Group, Bluenoroff, and Andariel) engaged in funneling stolen financial assets to the North Korean government.
“North Korea’s operatives, using keyboards rather than guns, stealing digital wallets of cryptocurrency instead of sacks of cash, are the world’s leading bank robbers,” Demers added.
“The Department will continue to confront malicious nation state cyber activity with our unique tools and work with our fellow agencies and the family of norms abiding nations to do the same.”