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China-Japan-Koreas
EX-pentagon official who spied for China gets 3 years
2010-01-23
[Iran Press TV Latest] A former US Defense Department official has been sentenced to three years in prison on charges of spying for China and lying to investigators.

James Fondren Jr., 62, was accused of providing classified Pentagon documents to a naturalized US citizen from Taiwan, Tai Shen Kuo, who had close contacts with an unnamed Chinese government official.

Fondren was also in email contact with the Chinese official and met him during a visit to China in 1999.

Fondren provided classified information to Kuo between 2004 and 2008, while he served as the deputy director of the Washington liaison office of US Pacific Command. The Justice Department did not describe the type of documents that were transferred.
Link


-Lurid Crime Tales-
Department of Defense Official Indicted For Chinese Espionage
2009-06-12
A federal grand jury in the Eastern District of Virginia has indicted James Wilbur Fondren Jr., on one count of conspiracy to communicate classified information to an agent of a foreign government and act as an illegal foreign agent; four counts of unlawfully communicating classified information to an agent of a foreign government; and three counts of making false statements to the FBI. If convicted on all charges, Fondren would face a maximum of 60 years in prison.

David Kris, Assistant Attorney General for National Security; Dana Boente, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia; and Joseph Persichini, Jr., Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI’s Washington Field Office, made the announcement.

Fondren, age 62, worked at the Pentagon and, from August 2001 through Feb. 11, 2008, was the Deputy Director, Washington Liaison Office, U.S. Pacific Command (PACOM). He held a Top Secret security clearance, worked in a Sensitive Compartmentalized Information Facility (SCIF) and had a classified and unclassified computer at his cubicle. He has been on administrative leave with pay since mid-February 2008 and has not performed any duties in or for PACOM since that time.

On May 13, 2009, Fondren turned himself in to federal agents after being charged in a criminal complaint with conspiracy to communicate classified information to an agent of a foreign government.

According to the indictment returned today, from approximately Nov. 2004 to Feb. 11, 2008, Fondren provided certain classified Defense Department documents and other information to Tai Shen Kuo, a naturalized U.S. citizen from Taiwan.

Fondren was aware that Kuo had maintained a close relationship with an official of the People’s Republic of China (PRC), to whom Kuo introduced Fondren during a trip the two took to the PRC in March 1999. As Kuo well knew, this individual was an official of the PRC government. Fondren and the PRC official exchanged more than 40 email messages between March 1999 and November 2000.

Fondren is alleged to have provided classified information through Kuo, under the guise of consulting services, using a business that had Kuo as its sole customer. Fondren would incorporate this information into “opinion papers” that he sold to Kuo. He would also provide Kuo with sensitive, but unclassified Defense Department publications.

The indictment also alleges that, when Fondren was interviewed by FBI agents regarding this investigation, he falsely represented that everything he wrote to Kuo in his opinion papers was based on information from press and media reports and from his experience; that he had never taken any classified information home; and that he had not given Kuo a draft copy of an unclassified document on military strategy.

This investigation was conducted by the FBI. The Air Force Office of Special Investigations (OSI) provided substantial assistance and cooperation throughout the course of the investigation.

The prosecution is being handled by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Neil Hammerstrom and James P. Gillis, from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Virginia, and Trial Attorney Ryan Fayhee from the Counterespionage Section of the Justice Department’s National Security Division.

The public is reminded that an indictment only contains charges and is not evidence of guilt. A defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.
Link


China-Japan-Koreas
Pentagon Official Accused of Passing Secrets to China
2009-05-14
Anyone surprised by this? China is doing everything it can to penetrate our military, intel and political spheres.
A mid-level Pentagon official working for U.S. Pacific Command now faces criminal charges in an ongoing espionage investigation for allegedly providing classified information to an agent of the Chinese government. James Fondren served as the Deputy Director of Pacific Command's liaison office and had a long friendship with Tai Shen Kuo, who was arrested and charged last year for passing sensitive information onto Chinese military and intelligence officials.

Fondren and Kuo were both friends and business associates. Prior to working at the Pentagon as a civilian, Fondren served as a Lt. Colonel in the U.S. Air Force and retired in 1996. Two years later, according to the criminal complaint, Fondren established a consulting company in Virginia whose sole client was Kuo, a naturalized US citizen from Taiwan who lived in Louisiana and ran two companies in the United States.

Kuo is also linked to Gregg Bergersen, a former policy analyst at the Defense Security Cooperation Agency. Kuo and Bergersen were arrested last February on espionage charges. Bergersen was accused of providing information on weapon sales to Taiwan and passing military communications security information to Kuo. Bergersen pleaded guilty to disclosing national defense information in March 2008 and was sentenced to 57 months in prison. Kuo pleaded guilty to conspiracy to disclosing national defense information a year ago and is currently serving a 15-year prison term.
Link


China-Japan-Koreas
Chinese spy in US sentenced to 15 years
2008-08-09
A Taiwan-born US national who admitted passing US military secrets to China has been sentenced to more than 15 years in a US prison.

Tai Shen Kuo, a furniture salesman from New Orleans, used gifts and job promises to convince a former Pentagon analyst to hand over secret documents. He then passed the files, which mainly concerned US sales to Taiwan and military communications, to Beijing.

Kuo's Pentagon contact and an intermediary had earlier been jailed.

Court reports said that Kuo, a naturalised US citizen, received $50,000 (£25,000) from an unnamed Chinese agent for passing the documents to Beijing.

The US Justice Department said that he had "cultivated a friendship" with policy analyst Gregg Bergersen, showering him with gifts and dinners and leading him to believe that on his retirement he would be given a job in a company selling American defence technology to Taiwan. Bergersen, was jailed for 57 months in July, although the US government said that had been unaware Kuo was in contact with Chinese officials.

Yu Xin Kang, who helped in the handover of the documents, was sentence to 18 months in jail on 1 August, after pleading guilty to charges of aiding a foreign government agent.
Link


China-Japan-Koreas
China dismisses U.S. spying charges
2008-02-14
China's Foreign Ministry spokesman dismissed U.S. allegations of Chinese spying as "Cold War thinking" and said the arrests of four Chinese nationals on espionage charges were "groundless."

"We hope and we require the United States to stop (this) groundless accusation, which does not help the mutual trust, relationship and friendship between the two countries," said Liu Jianchao. "This is not the first time ... It is time for this to end."
Yeah, doing things to harm mutual trust is a bad thing. Don't you agree?
A U.S. Justice Department official said Monday Chinese espionage was approaching "Cold War levels" after a Defense Department weapons system analyst and three Chinese nationals were arrested and charged in two espionage-related cases.

In a case brought by federal prosecutors in Virginia, a civilian analyst for the Defense Security Cooperation Agency is accused of selling to two Chinese associates classified information detailing U.S. weapons sales to Taiwan.

In a separate case, California prosecutors arrested and charged a long-time employee and contractor for Boeing and Rockwell of providing to Beijing secrets dealing with the Space Shuttle and several other sensitive military aircraft and rocket programs.

Assistant Attorney General Kenneth Wainstein, in a news conference announcing the arrests and charges, twice cited congressional testimony that concluded "aggressive" Chinese government espionage program have reached levels not seen since the Cold War with the Soviet Union.

"It's a threat to our national security and to our economic position in the world, a threat that is posed by the relentless efforts of foreign intelligence services to penetrate our security systems and steal our most sensitive military technology and information," Wainstein said.
So why do you keep hiring them, dumbass?
In the Virginia case, officials charge that Gregg Bergersen, 51, of Alexandria, Virginia, sold highly classified information to Tai Shen Kuo, 58, a naturalized citizen who resides in New Orleans. Kuo then allegedly handed the information to Yu Xin Kang, 33, a lawful resident alien also living in New Orleans. Kang in turn allegedly gave the information to a spy for the Chinese government.

Meanwhile, in Santa Ana, California, a long-time defense industry employee and contractor was scheduled to appear in court for allegedly providing military secrets to Beijing.

"A document says he did it out of loyalty to the 'motherland'," said U.S. Attorney Thomas O'Brien.
Well, let's see what that loyalty buys you now.
O'Brien said Dongfan "Greg" Chung, 72, of Orange, California, a naturalized U.S. citizen, had worked for Rockwell, Boeing and a Boeing contractor for more than 30 years.
Duh. Too PC to say 'no' even back in '72? Looks like he got his citizenship after the requisite five years and went right to 'work'.
"Chung made multiple trips to the PRC (People's Republic of China) to deliver lectures on technology involving the space shuttle and other programs, and during those trips he met with officials and agents of the PRC government," O'Brien said. Chung also allegedly provided information on the C-17 military transport and the Delta IV rocket.
Link


Home Front: WoT
Several arrested in Chinese spy sweep
2008-02-12
The FBI today arrested a Pentagon official and two Chinese-born residents on espionage charges for passing defense secrets to China, the Justice Department announced.

Gregg William Bergersen, 51, of Alexandria, was arrested at his home on espionage charges. Tai Shen Kuo, a Taiwan-born U.S. citizen, 58, and Yu Xin Kang, a Chinese national, 33, both of New Orleans, were arrested in New Orleans on charges of conspiracy to provide defense secrets to China.

Mr. Bergersen worked as a weapons system analyst for the Defense Security Cooperation Agency, in Arlington, which is in charge of U.S. arms sales to foreign nations. He held a top-secret clearance.

One official said the case involved the transfer of command, control, communications and intelligence equipment originally sold to Taiwan that was diverted to China.

Court papers state that the three men conspired to transfer defense secrets during meetings with Chinese intelligence officials. “Today's prosecution demonstrates that foreign spying remains a serious threat,” said Kenneth L. Wainstein, assistant attorney general for national security.

Mr. Wainstein said in a statement that the case has “all the elements of a classic espionage operation: a foreign government focused on accessing our military secrets; foreign operatives who effectively use stealth and guile to gain that access; and an American government official who is willing to betray both his oath of public office and the duty of loyalty we rightly demand from every American citizen.”

Such spy networks “pose a grave danger to our national security, and we should all thank the investigators and prosecutors on this case for effectively penetrating and dismantling this network before more sensitive information was compromised,” he said.
Link


China-Japan-Koreas
2 Espionage Cases Involving China; 4 Arrested Including DoD Official
2008-02-11
Two espionage cases were unfolding Monday, as one U.S. Department of Defense official, two Chinese nationals and a former Boeing Co. engineer were arrested.

In the first case, the Justice Department said Tai Shen Kuo, 58, Yu Xin Kang, 33, both of New Orleans, and Gregg William Bergersen, 51, of Alexandria, Va., were arrested on espionage charges in connection to "the passage of classified U.S. government documents and information to the government of the Peoples Republic of China," according to a department release. The Justice Department has scheduled a 2 p.m. ET press conference to discuss the cases.

Officials said the criminal conduct took place over a two-year period, in which Kuo, a naturalized U.S. citizen and businessman — working for an unnamed Chinese official — cultivated a relationship with Bergersen, and other U.S. government employees. The release states that Bergersen is a weapons systems policy analyst at the Arlington, Va.-based Defense Security Cooperation Agency, an agency within the Department of Defense.

Officials said Kuo was able to obtain "sensitive U.S. government information, including classified national defense information. Much of the information pertained to U.S. military sales to Taiwan," although the release did not clarify further the information that was obtained.

Bergersen is charged with being the source of the classified information collected by Kuo.Kang is a Chinese citizen with permanent resident status. The government alleges he transferred information between the unnamed Chinese official — "PRC Official A" — and Kuo.

The FBI was raiding a home in New Orleans on Monday in connection with the spy investigation. It was not immediately clear how the Louisiana raid was related, but FBI spokeswoman Sheila Thorne said the case would be discussed at the news conference in Washington.

Officials said a Los Angeles-area Chinese national who worked for a technology company until 2006 also would be charged for passing on sensitive military data to the Chinese government.

The second case revolves around former Boeing engineer Dongfan Greg Chung, 72, of Orange, Calif. He faces charges of economic espionage and acting as an unregistered foreign agent of the Peoples Republic of China. Prosecutors say he stole Boeing trade secrets, including ones related to the space shuttle program.
Link



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