Los Angeles Times

Charges dropped against 4 scientists

Researcher­s at several California universiti­es had been accused of hiding ties to Beijing.

- By Leila Miller and Del Quentin Wilber

The Justice Department moved in recent days to drop charges against four researcher­s at California universiti­es accused of hiding their ties to the Chinese military, a blow to U.S. efforts to battle Beijing’s attemps to steal U.S. national security and business secrets.

On Thursday, federal prosecutor­s in Sacramento asked a judge to dismiss the case of Juan Tang, a cancer researcher at UC Davis who had been accused of lying on a visa applicatio­n about having served in the Chinese military.

The request was granted, and on Friday prosecutor­s in three similar cases sought to dismiss charges against researcher­s who worked at Stanford University, UC San Francisco and UCLA.

Justice Department officials had said that such prosecutio­ns were an important part of their efforts to stop China from pilfering

U.S. technology.

The decision to drop the cases came after defense lawyers in the Sacramento case obtained FBI memos in which analysts raised questions about the value of such prosecutio­ns.

Though federal prosecutor­s in court papers dismissed the evidentiar­y value of the memos, they did not believe they could resolve questions about the records by the scheduled start of Tang’s trial on Monday and so decided to dismiss the case.

Justice Department officials said they decided to drop the other three cases in California — and a fifth in Indiana — because the legal and factual issues were similar and the researcher­s faced little prison time if convicted.

“In all of our prosecutio­ns, the Department of Justice evaluates the merits of a case as it prepares for trial,” said Wyn Hornbuckle, a Justice Department spokesman.

“Recent developmen­ts in a handful of cases involving defendants with alleged, undisclose­d ties to the People’s Liberation Army of the People’s Republic of China have prompted the Department to re-evaluate these prosecutio­ns, and we have determined that it is now in the interest of justice to dismiss them.

“The Department continues to place a very high priority on countering the threat posed to American research security and academic integrity by the PRC government’s agenda and policies,” Hornbuckle added.

Defense lawyers cheered the decision. Harland Braun, an attorney representi­ng Guan Lei, the UCLA researcher, said the Alhambra resident will return to China. Lei was indicted last year on charges of lying on a visa applicatio­n when he reported he had never served in the Chinese military.

“They took us by surprise today,” Braun said of prosecutor­s’ decision to drop the case. “The sad thing about the case is that there was never any evidence that he was a spy and [they] never had any evidence that he had access to classified informatio­n.

“He’s not a member of the military. He didn’t hide anything from the government,” he said. “The whole thing is ridiculous.”

Malcolm Segal, an attorney representi­ng Tang, 38, said prosecutor­s hadn’t provided a reason for the dismissal.

“We’re thrilled that Dr. Tang has received her passport back, been released from any bail restrictio­ns and can return home to her family, including her young daughter, who hasn’t seen her for over a year,” he said.

Last August, a federal grand jury charged Tang, who arrived to the U.S. in December 2019, with committing visa fraud and with making false statements.

Tang had applied for a a visa in October 2019 to “conduct cancer treatmentm­ethod research” at UC Davis, according to a trial brief filed by prosecutor­s.

The U.S. attorney’s office claimed that on her applicatio­n, Tang had falsely answered “no” when responding to the question “Have you ever served in the military?” as well as to questions related to Communist Party membership and whether she had any special chemical or biological experience.

Tang’s defense attorneys have claimed that she had worked as a civilian cancer researcher at a Chinese military medical facility and had disclosed this informatio­n to UC Davis.

Their trial brief argued that the question “Have you ever served in the military” on the visa applicatio­n has “potential for multiple correct and reasonable interpreta­tions.”

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