The Boston Globe

FBI: Chinese police had outpost in N.Y.

2 charged with acting as agents of government

- By William K. Rashbaum and Karen Zraick

NEW YORK — Two men were arrested early Monday on federal charges accusing them of conspiring to act as agents of the People’s Republic of China in connection with a police outpost operated in Manhattan’s Chinatown, officials announced in a news conference.

The outpost, which court papers say was run by Chinese security officials, is one of more than 100 Chinese police operations around the world that have unnerved diplomats and intelligen­ce officials. The case represents the first time criminal charges have been brought in connection with such a police outpost, according to a person with knowledge of the matter.

The charges against the men, Lu Jianwang, 61, and Chen Jinping, 59, grew out of an investigat­ion by the FBI and the US attorney’s office in Brooklyn into the Chinatown outpost, which conducted police operations without jurisdicti­on or diplomatic approval.

“Today’s charges are a crystal clear response to the PRC that we are on to you, we know what you’re doing and we will stop it from happening in the United States of America,” Breon S. Peace, the US attorney in Brooklyn, said in announcing the charges with other officials.

Last fall, FBI counterint­elligence agents searched the outpost’s offices, located on the third floor of a nondescrip­t building at 107 E. Broadway, indicating an escalation in the global dispute over China’s efforts to police its diaspora far beyond its borders.

Officials in Ireland, Canada, and the Netherland­s have called on China to shut down similar operations in their countries. The FBI raid in New York was the first known example of authoritie­s seizing materials from one of the outposts.

It could not be immediatel­y determined whether the men had lawyers. Lu, who is also known as Harry Lu, lives in the Bronx and maintains a residence in China. Chen lives in Manhattan. Both are US citizens.

In 2018 IRS filings, Lu was listed as the president of a nonprofit organizati­on called the America Changle Associatio­n NY, whose offices housed the police outpost. A criminal complaint unsealed Monday said the group was formed in 2013 and lists its charitable mission as a “social gathering place” for people from the Chinese city of Fuzhou.

The two men were charged with obstructio­n of justice and accused of destroying text messages between themselves and their handler at China’s Ministry of Public Security in October 2022, around the time of the FBI search, as well as conspiring to act as agents of the People’s Republic of China without registerin­g with the Justice Department, as the law requires.

 ?? HILARY SWIFT/THE NEW YORK TIMES/FILE ?? The FBI says a building at 107 E. Broadway in New York’s Chinatown served as an outpost for the Chinese police.
HILARY SWIFT/THE NEW YORK TIMES/FILE The FBI says a building at 107 E. Broadway in New York’s Chinatown served as an outpost for the Chinese police.

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