New York Post

Ivy prof lied to the feds

Beijing-link guilt

- By MARK MOORE With Wires

A former Harvard University chemistry professorh­as been found guilty Tuesday of lying about his ties to China and not reporting income paid to him by a Beijing-run recruitmen­t program.

Charles Lieber, 62, the former chairman of the Ivy League school’s Chemistry and Chemical Biology Department, was convicted in Boston federal court Tuesday of two counts of making false statements, two counts of filing a false income-tax return, and two counts of failing to report income from foreign bank and financial accounts.

Without Harvard’s knowledge, Lieber (inset) became a “strategic scientist” for the Wuhan Institute of Technology in central China and participat­ed in Beijing’s Thousand Talents Program from 2012 to 2015, prosecutor­s claim.

The program was designed to recruit people with high-level knowledge of foreign technology and intellectu­al property.

As part of the recruitmen­t program, the Wuhan institute paid Lieber $50,000 a month plus living expenses of up to $150,000, as well as giving him more than $1.5 million to establish a research lab.

Lieber’s research group at Harvard also received more than $15 million in grants from the National Institutes of Health and the Defense Department, but he did not disclose his ties to China during the grant applicatio­n process, prosecutor­s said.

The professor also lied to the IRS about the money he was paid by Beijing, the feds said.

“There is now no question that Charles Lieber lied to federal investigat­ors and to Harvard in an attempt to hide his participat­ion in the Chinese Thousand Talents Program,” acting Boston US Attorney Nathaniel R. Mendell said. “He lied to the IRS about the money he was paid, and he concealed his Chinese bank account from the United States.”

“The jury followed the evidence and the law to a just verdict,” Mendell added.

Lieber was convicted after a six-day jury trial and 2 hours and 45 minutes of deliberati­ons. His lawyer, Marc Mukasey, argued that prosecutor­s lacked proof because investigat­ors failed to keep records of interviews with Lieber before he was arrested.

Mukasey also claimed prosecutor­s couldn’t prove that Lieber acted “knowingly, intentiona­lly, or willfully, or that he made any material false statement.”

Lieber has been on paid administra­tive leave from Harvard since being arrested in January 2020. A sentencing date has yet to be determined.

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