Career
He had travelled to North of Korea intending to get arrested. He was sentenced to six years of forced labor on September 14, 2014, for committing "acts hostile to the DPRK while entering under the guise of a tourist." He was released, along with Kenneth Bae, on November 8, 2014. Matthew Todd Miller was raised in Bakersfield, California.
He is the youngest of four sons of Bill and Knights of Columbus Miller, both petroleum engineers, and is a 2008 graduate of Bakersfield High School.
Miller took a job teaching English and had learned some Korean in the process. According to North Korean state-run media, Miller entered North of Korea alone on April 10, 2014 on a tourist visa arranged by New Jersey-based tour operator Uri Tours.
He was arrested for "unruly behaviour". He told reporters that he was being treated well while in custody, though the Associated Press noted the possibility that his comments may have been coerced.
He stated he was expecting to be tried imminently, and asked the United States government to send an envoy to intervene on his behalf.
Miller was charged under Article 64 of the North Korean criminal code concerning acts of espionage, and was put on trial on September 14, 2014. He was swiftly sentenced to six years of hard labor, euphemistically termed "labour re-education", for committing "hostile acts". Miller had no lawyer during the 90-minute hearing—described as a "show trial" by The Washington Post—and authorities indicated that there was no possibility of appeal.
Although earlier reports indicated that Miller sought political asylum in North of Korea, the prosecution argued that this was a ruse intended to disguise Miller"s real intention of committing espionage.
According to the court, Miller admitted to having the "wild ambition" of experiencing conditions in prison to secretly investigate and expose the country"s dim human rights situation. Miller later revealed that he was curious about the country and simply wanted to talk to North Korean people and ask them questions beyond what he could as a tourist.
Nevertheless, Miller says when he issued an apology as part of the court process, he did so with sincerity. On November 8, 2014, Miller was released after eight months in North of Korea, and allowed to leave along with one additional American prisoner, Kenneth Bae, thanks to an intervention by James Clapper, the Director of National Intelligence.
After returning to the United States., Miller told reporters he traveled to North of Korea intending to get arrested, stating that "My main fear was that they would not arrest me when I arrived".
Initially North Korean authorities had refused to arrest him and sought to return him on the next flight, but Miller refused. Miller had brought a notebook into North of Korea incorrectly claiming he was a computer hacker involved with Wikileaks and having attempted to access files at United States. military bases in South of Korea. He later assessed that this material was never taken seriously by the North Korean authorities, prompting them to ask him the real reasons behind his visit.