Mississauga man pleads guilty to laundering money in alleged North Korean cyberhack
WASHINGTON — A Canadian man has pleaded guilty in what U.S. prosecutors described Wednesday as a scheme by hackers linked to military intelligence in North Korea to steal more than $1.3 billion from banks, governments and companies around the world.
Ghaleb Alaumary, 37, of Mississauga, Ont., was charged with conspiring to launder money on behalf of what the U.S. Department of Justice called a “wide-ranging criminal conspiracy” that targeted everything from a Hollywood movie studio to the U.S. State Department.
John Demers, the department’s assistant attorney general for national security, described the regime of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un as nothing short of “a criminal syndicate with a flag.”
“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 said.