US charges alleged Chinese spies for interfering in Huawei case
US prosecutors have charged two alleged Chinese spies with
attempting to interfere in a criminal investigation against Chinese telecoms
giant Huawei.
Chinese nationals Guochun He and Zheng Wang are accused of
trying to bribe a US official for confidential information about the
investigation, including about witnesses, trial evidence, and new charges.
However, the pair were actually giving $61,000 in Bitcoin to
an FBI double agent. That agent provided them with documents apparently giving
some of the information they sought, but they were actually fake documents
created by the Justice Department as part of the sting operation.
The alleged spies did not get access to real information
into the US investigation into whether Huawei conducted racketeering and
conspired to steal trade secrets.
In 2020, the DoJ alleged Huawei deliberately stole trade
secrets from several companies, including six US technology firms. It also
alleges the Chinese business broke trade sanctions to provide surveillance
equipment and services to Iran and North Korea.
"This was an egregious attempt by PRC intelligence
officers to shield a PRC-based company from accountability and to undermine the
integrity of our judicial system,” attorney general Merrick Garland said.
Arrest warrants were issued for the two men, but they are
believed to be safely based in China.
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