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Arizona Woman Sentenced To Over 8 Years For IT Fraud To Benefit North Korea

July 30, 2025

By Ethan Faverino |

Christina Marie Chapman of Litchfield Park, Arizona, was sentenced to 102 months in prison for her role in a scheme that facilitated North Korean IT workers in obtaining remote positions at over 300 U.S. companies.

Chapman helped generate $17 million in illicit revenue for the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK).

The sentencing, handed down by U.S. District Court Judge Randolph D. Moss in the District of Columbia, also includes three years of supervised release, forfeiture of $284,555 intended for North Korean operatives, and a $176,850 judgment.

Chapman pleaded guilty on February 11, 2025, to charges of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, aggravated identity theft, and conspiracy to launder monetary instruments.

Chapman’s scheme was one of the largest in North Korean IT worker fraud cases prosecuted by the Department of Justice. It involved 68 U.S. citizens’ identities and defrauded 309 U.S. businesses, including Fortune 500 companies such as a major television network, a Silicon Valley tech firm, an aerospace manufacturer, an American automaker, a luxury retail chain, and a media company.

“Chapman made the wrong calculation: short-term personal gains that inflict harm on our citizens and support a foreign adversary will have severe long-term consequences,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Matthew R. Galeotti of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division. “I encourage companies to remain vigilant of these cyber threats and warn individuals who may be tempted by similar schemes to take heed of today’s sentence.”

U.S. Attorney Jeanine Ferris Pirro for the District of Columbia said, “North Korea is not just a threat to the homeland from afar. It is an enemy within. It is perpetrating fraud on American citizens, American companies, and American banks. It is a threat to Main Street in every sense of the word.”

Chapman operated a “laptop” farm from her Arizona home, hosting and managing laptops sent by U.S. companies under the false idea that the work was performed domestically.

She organized these devices, labeling them with the associated company and stolen identity.

Additionally, Chapman shipped 49 laptops and other devices to locations overseas, including a city in China near the North Korea border.

A search warrant executed in October 2023 led to the seizure of over 90 laptops from her residence.

The scheme also involved falsifying payroll records, forging checks, and funneling wages through Chapman’s U.S. financial accounts to overseas recipients, falsely reporting income to the IRS and Social Security Administration under stolen identities.

North Korea IT workers, using false or stolen U.S. identities, targeted high-profile companies and even attempted employment at two different U.S. government agencies, though they were unsuccessful.

Ethan Faverino is a reporter for AZ Free News. You can send him news tips using this link.

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