Room 39 is also involved in the management of foreign currency earnings from foreigners' hotels in Pyongyang, gold and zinc mining, and agricultural and fisheries exports. They are believed to run networks of illegal and legal companies that often change names. The number of companies believed to be controlled by Room 39 - reportedly up to 120 in number at one point - include
Zokwang Trading and
Taesong Bank. Criminal operations reported to be run by Room 39 include trafficking fake US dollars, peddling bogus
Viagra, exporting the recreational drug
N-methylamphetamine, obtaining Russian oil using dealers in Singapore, and hacking into cryptocurrency exchange platforms. At some point, transactions and trade by Office 39 reached 25 to 50% of the total of North Korean GDP. In 2009, a
Washington Post report outlined a global insurance fraud scheme by the North Korean government. The state-owned Korea National Insurance Corp (KNIC) sought
reinsurance contracts with international reinsurers and then submitted fraudulent claims; the contracts were governed by North Korean law and legal challenges were fruitless. In 2015, the
European Union placed the
Korea National Insurance Corporation (KNIC) under sanctions and added that the KNIC had links to Office 39. The KNIC (which had offices in Hamburg, Germany and London, UK) was reported to have had assets of UK £787 million in 2014 and had been involved in scamming insurance markets and making investments in property and foreign exchange.
Thae Yong-ho, a North Korean diplomat who defected in 2016, said that North Korea earned each year "tens of millions of dollars" with insurance fraud. Ri Jong Ho was chairman of the Korea Kumgang Group that formed a joint venture with a Chinese businessman to run a taxi company in Pyongyang, the president of a North Korean shipping company, and head of a Chinese branch of Daeheung, a North Korean trading company involved in seafood, coal, shipping and oil. In a 2017 newspaper article Ri described how he evaded sanctions by transferring cash from China to North Korea by ship and by train. A 2020 review by the
National Intelligence Service found that the Korea Kaesong Koryo Insam Trading Corporation was likely a front for Room 39. ==In popular culture==