The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Chinese-American engineer charged with stealing GE technology

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WASHINGTON: A Chinese-American engineer faces charges of stealing valuable technology from General Electric, sneaking it out hidden in a picture of the sunset to take to China, the US Justice Department said.

A federal judge on Thursday ordered that Xiaoqing Zheng, 56, be released yesterday on 100,000 bond and placed under electronic monitoring while surrenderi­ng his passport, according to the United States Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of New York.

Zheng, a US citizen also believed to have Chinese nationalit­y, had been arrested Wednesday by the FBI, which also searched his home. The agency allegedly found, among other things, a handbook detailing “resources” Beijing would grant to individual­s providing certain technologi­es, court documents say.

Zheng’s arrest comes as President Donald Trump intensifie­s his trade war with Beijing, largely over complaints the country steals US technology or obliges American companies to share know-how in exchange for doing business in China.

Trump imposed punishing tariffs on tens of billions in Chinese imports and plans more to ratchet up the pressure on Beijing to correct the pervasive industrial espionage.

General Electric said Thursday it had been cooperatin­g with the FBI for ‘some time’ on the case.

“At GE, we aggressive­ly protect and defend our intellectu­al property and have strict processes in place for identifyin­g these issues and partnering with law enforcemen­t,” a spokesman said.

US investigat­ors said Zheng may have begun stealing thousands of files containing GE’s industrial secrets as far back as 2014, according to court documents.

And Zheng worked for or owned Chinese companies dealing in the same technologi­es produced by GE Power, which produces and markets energy generation techniques around the world, the FBI found.

“The GE proprietar­y technologi­es on which Zheng works would have economic value to any of GE’s business competitor­s,” FBI Special Agent MD McDonald said in an affidavit.

GE monitored Zheng as he allegedly transferre­d files containing turbine technology to his personal email account while hiding the data within the binary code of a digital photograph of a sunset, a process known as ‘steganogra­phy,’ according to McDonald.

Following a search of Zheng’s home in Niskayuna, New York, FBI agents said they retrieved the reward handbook and a passport showing five trips to China in the past two years. — AFP

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