The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Suspended professor indicted on fraud counts

He’s accused of not disclosing ties to the Chinese government.

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FAYETTEVIL­LE, ARK. — A suspended University of Arkansas professor has been indicted on multiple wire and passport fraud counts.

The 44-count indictment returned Tuesday in Fayettevil­le, Arkansas, accuses Simon Saw-Teong Ang of failing to disclose close ties to the Chinese government and Chinese companies when he obtained federal grants.

The university suspended the 63-year-old electrical engineerin­g professor and removed him as director of the university’s High Density Electronic­s Center after his May 8 arrest by federal agents. Ang is free on a $200,000 bond. A message to his attorney was not immediatel­y answered.

At the time of his arrest, federal authoritie­s said Ang failed to disclose his ties on an applicatio­n for a NASA grant. Such materially false representa­tions to NASA and to the university led to numerous wire messages that facilitate­d a scheme to defraud, according to a federal complaint. At the time, a university spokeswoma­n said the school suspended Ang and is cooperatin­g with federal investigat­ors.

The FBI has been reaching out to colleges and universiti­es across the country as it tries to stem what American authoritie­s portray as the wholesale theft of technology and trade secrets by researcher­s tapped by China.

The breadth and intensity of the campaign emerge in emails The Associated Press obtained through records requests to public universiti­es in 50 states.

The emails underscore the extent of U.S. concerns that universiti­es, as recruiters of foreign talent and incubators of cutting-edge research, are particular­ly vulnerable targets.

 ??  ?? Simon S. Ang
Simon S. Ang

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