A 40-year-old man from Maryland faces up to 20 years in prison for defrauding US agencies by outsourcing his remote IT work.
Vong, who previously worked in a nail salon, managed to deceive multiple US companies including government agencies into hiring him. As part of his guilty plea, he admitted to allowing North Korean nationals, operating out of China, to pose as him and perform highly sensitive IT work remotely.
Fake resume, real jobs
Vong told the FBI that he was initially approached by someone calling himself “William James” on a gaming app. “James” offered to help Vong make money legally through remote IT jobs. He and his associates fabricated a resume for Vong, claiming he had a degree from the University of Hawaii, 16 years of experience as a software developer, and had held a secret-level security clearance.
One of the positions Vong fraudulently secured was on a Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) contract that involved monitoring aviation assets mid-flight in the US. After being hired, Vong was issued a MacBook Pro and a Personal Identity Verification card, granting him access to secure government systems and facilities.
Fake employee attended meetings
Instead of doing the job himself, Vong installed remote-access software on the FAA-issued laptop, which allowed individuals in China to log in and work under his identity. These operatives even attended Zoom meetings on Vong’s behalf, discussing task lists and pretending to be him in daily team updates.
The US Department of Justice revealed that Vong was part of a broader scheme where North Korean operatives gained access to US remote jobs through American citizens, funneling earnings back to North Korea’s regime.
The elaborate fraud spanned from 2021 to 2024 and Vong now faces up to 20 years in prison.
(Also read: Chinese techie lives in his car for 4 years despite owning a four-storey house)

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