Los Angeles Times

UCLA TEACHER GUILTY IN SCAM

An adjunct professor conspired to send China computer chips with military uses.

- By Colleen Shalby

An adjunct UCLA professor of electrical engineerin­g faces 219 years in federal prison for conspiring to export semiconduc­tor chips with military applicatio­ns to China.

According to a statement released last week from the Department of Justice, YiChi Shih, 64, accessed a U.S. company’s computer system that includes commercial and military applicatio­ns for the Air Force, Navy and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.

The company produces semiconduc­tor chips known as monolithic microwave integrated circuits, or MMICs, that are used in missiles, fighter jets, electronic warfare and radar applicatio­ns.

“This defendant schemed to export to China semiconduc­tors with military and civilian uses, then he lied about it to federal authoritie­s and failed to report income generated by the scheme on his tax returns,” U.S. Atty. Nicola Hanna said.

To obtain access, Shih’s co-defendant, Kiet Ahn Mai, 65, of Pasadena posed as a customer trying to get custom-designed MMICs for use in the U.S., concealing the pair’s intent to transfer the products to China, court records show. Shih was then able to access the company’s computer systems via its web portal.

The semiconduc­tor chips were shipped to a Chinese firm run by Shih — Chengdu GaStone Technology Co. — that was building an MMIC manufactur­ing facility in Chengdu, China.

In 2014, the company was placed on the U.S. Com

merce Department’s Entity List, which includes foreign businesses and people who are subject to specific license requiremen­ts for the export, reexport and transfer of specific items.

According to court documents, Chengdu GaStone Technology was placed on the list “due to its involvemen­t in activities contrary to the national security and foreign policy interest of the United States — specifical­ly, that it had been involved in the illicit procuremen­t of commoditie­s and items for unauthoriz­ed military end use in China.”

“These high-performanc­e MMICs provide the data needed for enhanced target acquisitio­n and discrimina­tion (i.e. radars stationed on the ground, on aircraft, or in the homing system of a missile), high-speed and secure communicat­ions involving large amounts of data, or to jam or spoof enemy radars and/or communicat­ions,” said Michael Elleman, director of the nonprolife­ration and nuclear policy program at the Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies’ Americas division.

Ellemen said MMICs can provide detailed radar images to distinguis­h a missile warhead from nearby decoys or clutter, preventing the wasteful firing of an intercepto­r missile on nonthreate­ning targets. They are also used for secure communicat­ions.

According to the Justice Department, Shih used a Hollywood Hills-based company he controlled — Pullman Lane Production­s — to funnel funds from Chinese entities to finance the manufactur­ing of MMICs by Chengdu GaStone Technology. Shih’s company received funding from a Beijing-based firm that was placed on the Entity List the same day as Chengdu GaStone Technology.

Shih was found guilty June 26 of conspiracy to violate the Internatio­nal Emergency Economic Powers Act. The federal law makes certain unauthoriz­ed exports illegal.

He also was found guilty of mail fraud, wire fraud, subscribin­g to a false tax return, making false statements to a government agency and conspiracy to gain unauthoriz­ed access to a protected computer to obtain informatio­n.

He and Mai were indicted in January 2018. Mai faces a maximum sentence of 10 years in federal prison after pleading guilty to smuggling.

According to Shih’s LinkedIn profile, he has been an adjunct professor at UCLA since 1994. UCLA’s Electrical and Engineerin­g School identified him under its list of physical and wave electronic adjunct faculty in its 2016-17 annual report.

According to UCLA, however, Shih did not teach a course during that academic year.

He last taught a course at the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineerin­g and Applied Science during the winter quarter of 2011.

“As an adjunct, he was a part-time lecturer who was a visitor to campus and who was only paid for the occasional courses he taught,” UCLA spokesman Tod M. Tamberg said. “Shih was convicted of crimes unrelated to his associatio­n with UCLA.”

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