North Korean IT Remote Worker Fraud Scheme Data Security and Employment Law Impact The recent indictment of 14 North Korean nationals for fraudulently obtaining remote IT jobs with U.S.-based companies underscores the importance ... 01/20/2025 - 8:51 am | View Link
US Announces Sanctions Against North Korean Fake IT Worker Network The US Treasury has sanctioned two individuals and four entities involved in the North Korean fake IT worker scheme. 01/16/2025 - 10:28 pm | View Link
U.S. Sanctions North Korean IT Worker Network Supporting WMD Programs The U.S. Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) sanctioned two individuals and four entities for their alleged involvement in illicit revenue generation schemes for the ... 01/16/2025 - 9:07 pm | View Link
U.S. imposes sanctions on North Korean network funding weapons programs through IT workers The United States on Thursday imposed sanctions on two North Koreans and four entities to target a network that uses North Korean IT workers to generate revenue for the recalcitrant regime's weapons ... 01/16/2025 - 1:09 pm | View Link
US Sanctions North Korean Remote IT Worker Front Companies The U.S. federal government targeted for sanctions a network of North Korean front companies and a Chinese supplier that support a Pyongyang program of planting ... 01/16/2025 - 5:45 am | View Link
WELLINGTON, New Zealand — Among other false and misleading claims in U. S. President Donald Trump’s inauguration addresses on Tuesday, his declaration that Americans “split the atom” prompted vexed social media posts by New Zealanders, who said the achievement belonged to a pioneering scientist revered in his homeland.
Ernest Rutherford, a Nobel Prize winner known as the father of nuclear physics, is regarded by many as the first to knowingly split the atom by artificially inducing a nuclear reaction in 1917 while he worked at a university in Manchester in the United Kingdom.
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The achievement is also credited to English scientist John Douglas Cockroft and Ireland’s Ernest Walton, researchers in 1932 at a British laboratory developed by Rutherford.
President Donald Trump on Monday granted clemency to nearly 1,600 people who joined in the January 6 attack on Congress that he himself caused.
Hours after returning to office, Trump announced he was giving “full, complete and unconditional” pardons to nearly all “individuals convicted of offenses related to events that occurred at or near the United States Capitol on January 6, 2021.”
Trump also announced commutations of prison sentences for the handful of January 6 convicts not given full pardons—14 top members of the far-right Oath Keepers militia and Proud Boys—freeing them from lengthy prison sentences.
These actions mean that Stewart Rhodes, the Oath Keepers leader who was sentenced to 18 years in prison following his conviction for seditious conspiracy and other crimes for planning violence on January 6, is a free man.