Los Angeles Times

New charges in Huawei case

U.S. prosecutor­s say organized system of trade-secret theft was behind firm’s growth.

- By Patricia Hurtado, Alyza Sebenius and Todd Shields

U.S. prosecutor­s say decades of property theft fueled the company’s growth.

The United States raised the stakes in its battle with Huawei Technologi­es Co., using a law historical­ly associated with prosecutin­g mafia figures to claim the Chinese company engaged in decades of intellectu­al property theft.

Huawei, the world’s largest maker of telecommun­ications equipment, and Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou had already faced criminal charges. The fresh allegation­s, announced Thursday, up the ante by including racketeeri­ng conspiracy, increasing the potential punishment. They come amid the global battle for supremacy in fifth-generation wireless tech, or 5G.

Huawei broke the law “to drasticall­y cut its research and developmen­t costs and associated delays, giving the company a significan­t and unfair competitiv­e advantage,” the Justice Department

said in a statement. The company launched a bonus program to reward employees who got their hands on confidenti­al informatio­n from competitor­s, prosecutor­s said.

The new charges depict a company that won internatio­nal standing by stealing trade secrets, evading U.S sanctions and lying to authoritie­s. They are likely to increase tensions between Beijing and Washington, which has accused Huawei of spying for the Chinese government, even as the U.S. Commerce Department gave Huawei a brief reprieve Thursday from a ban that will forbid some U.S. mobile providers from buying parts from the company.

The indictment doesn’t name the businesses from which Huawei allegedly stole intellectu­al property, but details of the allegation­s match descriptio­ns of companies including Cisco Systems Inc., Motorola Inc. and Cnex Labs Inc.

“The indictment paints a damning portrait of an illegitima­te organizati­on that lacks any regard for the law,” Sens. Richard M. Burr (RN.C.), the chairman of the Intelligen­ce Committee, and Mark R. Warner (D-Va.), the panel’s vice chairman, said in an emailed statement. “Intellectu­al property theft, corporate sabotage and market manipulati­on are part of Huawei’s core ethos and reflected in every aspect of how it conducts business.”

Huawei, in turn, has accused the United States of orchestrat­ing a campaign to intimidate its employees and launching cyberattac­ks to infiltrate its internal network.

A lawyer for Huawei had no comment on the new charges. The company has denied the allegation­s, while China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs has urged the U.S. to “stop unreasonab­ly targeting Huawei and other Chinese enterprise­s.”

Huawei was previously accused of violating U.S. sanctions against Iran and North Korea. Meng, the CFO, was charged with fraud last year, with the case rippling into Canada, where she is fighting extraditio­n to the U.S. Meng ’s lawyers have argued in court that their client did nothing wrong.

The United States said Huawei stole trade secrets — including copyrighte­d works, source code and user manuals for internet routers — to “grow and operate” its business. The company swiped antenna technology and robot testing technology, prosecutor­s said.

Then, they said, it doubled down.

“When confronted with evidence of wrongdoing, the defendants allegedly made repeated misstateme­nts to U.S. officials, including FBI agents and representa­tives from the U.S. House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligen­ce, regarding their efforts to misappropr­iate trade secrets,” they said.

The U.S. dates the thefts to 2002.

In the new indictment, the government is wielding some prior allegation­s of wrongdoing, such as Huawei’s alleged theft of a phone-testing robot developed by T-Mobile US Inc., to build a more muscular case. The U.S. alleged that a Huawei engineer secretly took photos of T-Mobile’s robot, Tappy, took measuremen­ts of parts and stole a piece of it. Huawei blamed “rogue actors” within the company when T-Mobile threatened to sue, the U.S. said.

Intellectu­al property theft “explains a lot of Huawei’s success,” said Jim Lewis of the Technology Policy Program at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington. “Huawei is the poster child for China’s commercial spying.”

Also this week, a top White House official, U.S. national security advisor Robert O’Brien, said Huawei is capable of accessing “sensitive and personal informatio­n” via a back door in the networking equipment it sells around the world.

Huawei said in a statement that it follows the same standards as other telecom operators, which require “lawful intercepti­on” facilities to comply with court-ordered wiretaps, but forcefully denied it illicitly accesses data. “Huawei has never and will never covertly access telecom networks, nor do we have the capability to do so,” the company said.

Hurtado, Sebenius and Shields write for Bloomberg.

 ?? Alex Plavevski EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? CHINESE TELECOMS giant Huawei engaged in decades of intellectu­al property theft to gain an unfair advantage, rewarding employees who got their hands on competitor­s’ trade secrets, the Justice Department said.
Alex Plavevski EPA/Shuttersto­ck CHINESE TELECOMS giant Huawei engaged in decades of intellectu­al property theft to gain an unfair advantage, rewarding employees who got their hands on competitor­s’ trade secrets, the Justice Department said.

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