The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Coke secrets case amid U.S. tension with China

FBI: Theft helps woman win Chinese aid to start can-coating company.

- By Matt Kempner mkempner@ajc.com and J. Scott Trubey strubey@ajc.com

After nearly five years with CocaCola, engineer Xiaorong “Shannon” You was getting downsized. Prosecutor­s allege that two days before her final shift in Atlanta, You gave herself a lucrative parting gift.

You uploaded to her Google Drive account confidenti­al documents detailing trade secrets from six Coke vendors worth more than $100 million, according to a federal indictment and an FBI agent’s testimony. It wasn’t Coke’s secret formula, but prosecutor­s say the records helped You win Chinese government funding to start a company making next-generation can coatings in a beverage industry segment worth $3 billion a year.

The case of You, who has pleaded not guilty, is just a pebble in an increasing­ly troubled terrain portrayed by U.S. trade players.

Chinese companies, individual­s and agents steal $225 billion to $600 billion a year in U.S. intellectu­al property ranging from

copying designs to make knockoff handbags to pirated music and movies to corporate America’s most sensitive technologi­es, according to one outside estimate U.S. officials cite.

The first phase of a new U.S.-China trade pact — signed Wednesday — addresses issues such as protecting trade secrets and battling pirated and counterfei­t goods, as well as providing U.S. companies and farmers with more access to Chinese markets. China also agreed to no longer force U.S. companies to transfer their technology to Chinese companies to enter that country’s market.

Yet some longtime observers question if the deal changes much because they doubt the willingnes­s of China’s government to fix the issue.

“Meaningful mechanisms are not going to be accepted” by political leaders in China, predicted Fei-Ling Wang, a Georgia Tech professor of internatio­nal affairs. “There will be great promises, but the promises are likely to be, at best, partially implemente­d.”

U.S. presidents and corporatio­ns have wrestled with the issue for decades, contending it eliminates American jobs, reduces business wealth and threatens innovation. The economic espionage is portrayed as so great, President Barack Obama branded it an issue of national security. President Donald Trump and lawmakers consider it a top priority in trade talks with China.

Federal officials launched an initiative two years ago specifical­ly aimed at fighting Chinese theft of trade secrets. U.S. reports say the designs and formulas for technologi­es as diverse as proprietar­y corn seeds, pigments, turbines and semiconduc­tors have been stolen, with tactics ranging from employees stealing documents to interconti­nental hacking.

China’s embassy in the U.S. did not respond to requests for comment from The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on, but authoritie­s have said they don’t organize or encourage heists of corporate secrets. “China’s technologi­cal achievemen­ts did not come from theft,” a foreign ministry spokesman said late last year, according to Reuters.

You, a naturalize­d U.S. citizen born in China, is scheduled to stand trial in April in Tennessee. Her attorneys did not respond to requests for comment, but one, Thomas Jessee, said in an April court hearing that the government’s case is overblown and that the documents You took weren’t trade secrets.

Coke said in a written statement it has a “multi-layered security system” to protect against intellectu­al theft. It declined to comment on You’s case.

You was arrested at her apartment in Lansing, Michigan, last February. The apartment had no furniture, save for a folding chair and table and a mattress on the floor. FBI Special Agent Bill Leckrone told a judge in April that agents also found a bag with You’s passport and thousands of dollars’ worth of cash in several currencies, including Chinese and Australian.

Thousand Talents

China is hardly the sole source of intellectu­al property theft. Last fall, a North Carolina man pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court in Savannah to conspiracy to steal anti-icing technology from aircraft companies.

In 2007, a former Coke secretary from Norcross was convicted of plotting to sell confidenti­al documents to rival Pepsi for $1.5 million. Pepsi instead tipped off Coke. The FBI swooped in after collecting documents stuffed in an Armani bag.

Yet some experts in the U.S. familiar with corporate espionage say China stands out.

“Their economy is so ingrained with counterfei­ting and thefts of trade secrets that even if they wanted to stop, it would be a devastatin­g blow to their economy,” said Vic Hartman, a former FBI agent who has investigat­ed intellectu­al property theft and is the author of a book on fraud.

The FBI contends You left a trail. Coke and many other companies have faced consumer angst over potential health threats from bisphenol A (BPA), a chemical used in a variety of consumer goods, including the coatings inside beverage cans. Before she was laid off, You worked on a Coke team assigned to select BPA-free coatings for future beverage containers.

You earned a Ph.D. in polymer science and engineerin­g at Lehigh University in Pennsylvan­ia. She was one of a few Coke researcher­s who interacted with companies competing to develop BPA-free coatings and had access to the vendors’ confidenti­al informatio­n, prosecutor­s allege.

In March 2017, prosecutor­s said, You, an engineer at a Chinese firm and an unnamed person conspired for You to steal records and eventually create a new company in China to develop BPA-free coatings.

But in June 2017, amid a broader corporate restructur­ing, You was told her job was being eliminated. Two months later, Special Agent Leckrone said, You learned of a gap in Coke’s systems that would allow her to bypass security and download files.

The Chinese company agreed that summer to sponsor You in a Chinese government-backed grant program known as Thousand Talents, according to court records. The program recruited foreign-trained Chinese scientists, engineers and others to return to their homeland to develop new technologi­es. You’s associates also sponsored her for a second grant program run by a Chinese province, prosecutor­s allege.

U.S. Assistant Attorney General John Demers said in announcing You’s indictment last year that China uses programs like Thousand Talents “to solicit and reward the theft of our nation’s trade secrets.”

Representa­tives of China’s U.S. embassy as well as the Thousand Talents program did not respond to AJC emails requesting comment about allegation­s surroundin­g the program.

After You was let go from Coke, she got a job with Eastman Chemical in Kingsport, Tennessee, where she also worked on BPAfree coatings.

Prosecutor­s allege she won the two grant programs and made multiple China trips to arrange the launch of a new company and forge joint ventures with her Chinese sponsors and Metlac, an Italian company. The government alleges You earned thousands of dollars in salary from the Chinese company while working for Eastman.

Text messages show You expressed interest in using her grant funds to acquire a beachfront apartment in the city of Weihai, the FBI’s Leckrone testified.

You suspected she would be fired when Eastman became disenchant­ed with her work, and prosecutor­s said she again downloaded confidenti­al records. Eastman detected the breach, fired You and seized her hard drive, prosecutor­s said.

Eastman officials later contacted the FBI after finding corporate documents belonging to six Coca-Cola vendors You previously worked with in her role at Coke, including Dow Chemical, Leckrone testified in the April hearing.

Jessee, You’s attorney, argued the records weren’t trade secrets. Some were older products, and others were publicly available records involving patented materials or products requiring public vetting through FDA approvals, he said.

Concern ‘verging on paranoia’?

Federal officials have traveled the nation urging companies to report internatio­nal theft of secrets. But Elizabeth Rowe, a University of Florida law professor and expert in trade secret issues, said businesses often see little benefit from doing so.

Publicity could put the U.S. companies in an uncomforta­ble light, and they risk angering Chinese officials who could block access to a massive market and important suppliers.

China is one of the top markets for Coke. The company is banking on more business there, with Asia Pacific its fastest-growing region by drink volume.

“We recognize that there are trade issues between the United States and China that should be addressed,” a Coke spokeswoma­n wrote to the AJC. “Our hope is that the two government­s find creative solutions to effectivel­y address those concerns. A trade war is not in either side’s interest.”

Meanwhile, U.S. law enforcemen­t also is scrutinizi­ng university-based researcher­s in the U.S. who are involved in Chinese-funded activities. The crackdown has raised broader questions about distinctio­ns between important global collaborat­ion among researcher­s and intellectu­al property theft.

Last year, Emory University dismissed two Chinese-born researcher­s involved in the search for a Huntington’s disease treatment. Emory said they hadn’t fully disclosed foreign research funding or the extent of work for research institutio­ns in China. Like You, the researcher­s, a husband and wife team, were naturalize­d U.S. citizens.

Attorney Peter Zeidenberg, who represente­d the husband, declined to comment on the Emory case. But Zeidenberg, speaking generally, said federal authoritie­s have been overly aggressive charging some researcher­s and others with Chinese ties.

“This concern, which is now verging on paranoia, has led them to prosecute people on the most trivial infraction­s while they are having the perverse effect of driving some of the most talented scientists in America back to China,” he said.

‘Their (China’s) economy is so ingrained with counterfei­ting and thefts of trade secrets that even if they wanted to stop, it would be a devastatin­g blow to their economy,’ said Vic Hartman, a former FBI agent who has investigat­ed intellectu­al property theft and is the author of a book on fraud.

 ?? AJC 2015 ?? Coke said in a written statement it has a “multi-layered security system” to protect against intellectu­al theft. It declined to comment on Xiaorong “Shannon” You’s case.
AJC 2015 Coke said in a written statement it has a “multi-layered security system” to protect against intellectu­al theft. It declined to comment on Xiaorong “Shannon” You’s case.
 ?? AJC 2017 ?? Coke and many other firms have faced consumer angst over potential health risks from bisphenol A (BPA), used in a variety of consumer goods, including the coatings inside beverage cans. Before she was laid off, Xiaorong “Shannon” You worked on a Coke team assigned to select BPA-free coatings for future beverage containers.
AJC 2017 Coke and many other firms have faced consumer angst over potential health risks from bisphenol A (BPA), used in a variety of consumer goods, including the coatings inside beverage cans. Before she was laid off, Xiaorong “Shannon” You worked on a Coke team assigned to select BPA-free coatings for future beverage containers.
 ?? AJC 2017 ?? China is one of the top markets for Atlanta-based Coke. The company is banking on more business there, with Asia Pacific its fastest-growing region by drink volume.
AJC 2017 China is one of the top markets for Atlanta-based Coke. The company is banking on more business there, with Asia Pacific its fastest-growing region by drink volume.

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