Daily Democrat (Woodland)

More charges against scientist in fraud case

- By Olga R. Rodriguez

Federal prosecutor­s say a Chinese researcher visiting Stanford University is facing new charges.

SAN FRANCISCO » A Chinese researcher visiting Stanford University who was charged with visa fraud after she allegedly hid her military background is facing new charges, federal prosecutor­s said.

A federal grand jury charged Chen Song, 39, with obstructio­n of justice, destructio­n of documents and making false statements to a government agency, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said Thursday.

“We allege that while Chen Song worked as a researcher at Stanford University, she was secretly a member of China’s military, the People’s Liberation Army,” U.S. Attorney David Anderson said in a statement. “When Song feared discovery, she destroyed documents in a failed attempt to conceal her true identity. This prosecutio­n will help to protect elite institutio­ns like Stanford from illicit foreign influences.”

Song was one of four Chinese scientists living in the U.S. and doing research at universiti­es who were arrested last July by the Justice Department, which accused them of lying about their status as members of the People’s Liberation Army. All were charged with visa fraud.

“The FBI’s investigat­ion revealed Song Chen took active steps to destroy evidence of her official affiliatio­n with the Chinese military, including her current PLA credential­s depicting her in military dress uniform,” FBI Special Agent in Charge Craig Fair said.

Song entered the United States on Dec. 23, 2018, using a J-1 non-immigrant visa to conduct research at Stanford. In the applicatio­n, she described herself as a neurologis­t who was coming to the U.S. to do research at Stanford related to brain disease. She also said that she had served in the Chinese military only from Sept. 1, 2000, through June 30, 2011, and that she worked for Xi Diaoyutai Hospital in Beijing.

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