Foreign intelligence services are using LinkedIn, job boards, and social media to recruit Americans with a flattering message and a generous paycheck — and the FBI says even routine expertise can make you a target
Here’s one worth paying attention to, neighbor, especially if you’ve ever worked in government, the military, or a job that touches sensitive information. The FBI is warning that foreign intelligence services are increasingly trolling professional networking sites, social media, and job boards to recruit Americans — often disguised as a too-good-to-pass-up consulting offer.
The FBI calls the tactic “virtual targeting.” Instead of the old cloak-and-dagger, in-person approach, foreign actors now use online platforms to find and recruit people with access to sensitive or classified information. According to Roman Rozhavsky, assistant director of the FBI’s Counterintelligence and Espionage Division, these services regularly pose as recruiters, consulting firms, researchers, or analysts to strike up a professional relationship and start collecting information. Among U.S. adversaries, the FBI said, China is by far the most prolific at it.
How the Trap Springs
It usually starts innocently. A recruiter sends a flattering message — they’re impressed by your government experience and want to offer paid, flexible, remote consulting work. The first assignments seem harmless: write a short report or white paper using publicly available information, or just share your professional opinion. The pay is good, and it arrives on time, which makes the whole thing feel legitimate.
That’s by design. According to the FBI, those early, easy tasks are a test — a way for the operative to gauge whether you’ll cooperate, while the payments build trust and keep you engaged. “These relationships often begin with harmless-looking tasks using public information,” Rozhavsky said. “Once trust is established, the assignments gradually become more specific, more lucrative, and more sensitive.”
Over time, the requests escalate toward non-public or classified material. The recruiter may flatter your expertise, offer more money for “exclusive insights,” and try to move the conversation off professional platforms onto encrypted messaging apps. Payment often shifts to harder-to-trace methods like cryptocurrency or peer-to-peer apps — all to hide the relationship and protect the foreign agency’s identity.
A Real Case
The FBI pointed to the case of Korbein Schultz, a former U.S. Army intelligence analyst who was sentenced to seven years in prison for conspiring to collect and transmit national defense information, among other charges. According to the FBI, someone posing as a client from a geopolitical consulting firm — actually a foreign national living in China — contacted Schultz through a freelance work platform and gradually demanded more sensitive material in exchange for money. Schultz ended up downloading and transmitting at least 92 sensitive U.S. military documents and even tried to recruit a fellow analyst. He never once met the person in real life.
Why Almost Anyone Can Be a Target
You don’t have to be a high-level official to get the call. The FBI said foreign recruiters go after current and former government employees, military members, contractors, and private-sector professionals — anyone with government, military, diplomatic, technological, or economic experience, or access to people who have it. They’ll even approach people who don’t currently hold sensitive jobs, betting that their education or career path could land them in a valuable position later.
“Anyone with specialized knowledge or government-related experience may be of interest,” Rozhavsky said. “Even seemingly routine expertise can help foreign intelligence services better understand U.S. systems and capabilities.” And the FBI noted that people who once held clearances remain responsible for protecting certain information even after they leave government service.
How to Protect Yourself
The good news is that awareness alone goes a long way. If you get an unexpected offer for remote consulting or employment, the FBI says to slow down and evaluate it carefully. Verify the company independently rather than taking the recruiter’s word for it. Be cautious about how much professional detail you share, and stay alert to unusual requests or odd payment methods like crypto or peer-to-peer transfers. Current clearance holders and government employees should also check their agency’s secondary-employment policy and report outside work if required.
And if you think a foreign agency may have contacted you, the FBI’s advice is simple: stop communicating immediately and report the contact at tips.fbi.gov. As the bureau puts it, virtual targeting is a serious and persistent threat — but recognizing the playbook is often all it takes to avoid getting snared.




