Hamilton Journal News

Man convicted of spying, attempted theft of trade secrets from GE

- By Paula Christian WCPO

CINCINNATI — The first Chinese intelligen­ce agent ever to be extradited to the United States was convicted late Friday by a federal jury in Cincinnati for his role in a global conspiracy to recruit spies and steal valuable aviation technology for China.

After deliberati­ng for two days, a jury of 12 Southwest Ohio residents found Yanjun Xu guilty of all four charges: conspiracy to commit economic espionage, conspiracy to steal trade secrets, attempted economic espionage, and attempted theft of trade secrets.

He faces up to 15 years when he is sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge Timothy Black, likely in three to four months.

For now, he is being housed in the Butler County Jail.

The historic espionage trial lasted three weeks in U.S. District Court in Cincinnati, where Xu is the first agent of China’s Ministry of State Security to be extradited for trial as an accused spy.

“This is surely among the most significan­t victories by United States law enforcemen­t against China’s naked ambition to acquire intellectu­al property by whatever means, legal or otherwise,” said former U.S. Attorney Ben Glassman, who initially oversaw the case when Xu was extradited to Cincinnati in 2018.

“The answer of the United States to another country’s ambition to gain through theft is simply to hold people accountabl­e under the law. I’m proud to be an American,” Glassman said.

The case is based here because it involves GE Aviation and a former engineer who cooperated with the FBI to lure Xu to his arrest in Belgium in 2018. In exchange the FBI agreed not to prosecute that engineer, David Zheng, who was fired from GE after he traveled to China for a university presentati­on.

“The jury, by its guilty verdict here today, held Xu accountabl­e for his classic spy techniques,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Vipal J. Patel. “This office will continue to seek to protect American innovation and hold accountabl­e those who attempt to steal our nation’s science and technology, regardless of status or affiliatio­n, whether civilian, military, or spy.”

The government’s strongest evidence in the case is the volumes of text messages, emails, calendar entries, photos and recordings that FBI agents retrieved from Xu’s phone when he was arrested in Belgium in April 2018.

“The evidence in this case, nearly all of it, came from his own words,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Tim Mangan told the jury in his closing statement. “It shines a light on what his deeds were … and a clear window into his intent.”

Mangan showed the jury a photo that Xu had taken of his resume, which detailed his 15-year career at the MSS. It showed his promotions through the years until he was named deputy division director with the Jiangsu State Security Department, Sixth Bureau, which witnesses said was responsibl­e for science and technology.

The MSS is the intelligen­ce and security agency for China and is responsibl­e for counterint­elligence, foreign intelligen­ce and political security.

Jurors also saw a photograph of Xu’s Chinese Communist Party membership card, which was stored on his phone.

Mangan showed jurors the emails he sent using aliases as Qu Hui, aka Zhang Hui, and business cards he had in those names with different jobs.

“It’s part of the con. That’s what it is. It’s a con,” Mangan said. “If you are on the up and up, if you have legitimate reason for what you’re doing, you don’t do this.”

But Xu’s attorney, Ralph Kohnen, tried to poke holes in the government’s case with a sprawling closing statement that questioned everything from their witnesses to criticizin­g GE Aviation for trying to thwart China’s progress in the aviation industry.

“GE and the FBI are trying to send a message to China and to slow China’s progress at developing composite (engine fan) technology, which we all know will eat away at GE’s market,” Kohnen said.

Prosecutor­s accuse Xu of a wide-reaching conspiracy to recruit spies to steal technology from aviation companies across the globe.

Kohnen accused prosecutor­s of blaming Xu for acts he had nothing to do with, in a “guilt by associatio­n” case.

“The government is preying on your patriotism and playing to your fears,” Kohnen said.

Xu’s large defense team opted not to call any witnesses during the threeweek trial.

Prosecutor­s called 15 witnesses, including the Belgian chief police inspector who arrested Xu, and an executive from French aviation company Safran, who said his laptop was infected with malware during a visit to China in 2014. Prosecutor­s attempted to tie that “Trojan Horse” malware to Xu.

Mangan tried the case with Matthew McKenzie, an attorney with the Department of Justice’s National Security Division, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Emily Glatfelter.

Mangan and Glatfelter won another high-profile trial almost exactly three years ago, when a jury convicted Evans Landscapin­g owner Doug Evans of minority contractin­g fraud. He is currently serving a 21-month prision sentence.

The next high-profile cases that Glatfelter will take before a jury are the public corruption trials of suspended Cincinnati City Council members Jeff Pastor and PG Sittenfeld, who will face separate trials in the spring of 2022. She is trying those cases with Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew Singer.

 ?? ?? Yanjun Xu found guilty of espionage charges.
Yanjun Xu found guilty of espionage charges.

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