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Chinese scholar pleads guilty to illegally exporting technology to China
Yahoo ^ | Wed, Nov 26, 2003 | AFP

Posted on 11/26/2003 5:33:40 PM PST by Lake

Chinese scholar pleads guilty to illegally exporting technology to China 1 hour, 40 minutes ago

WASHINGTON (AFP) - US-based Chinese scholar Gao Zhan, once convicted by Beijing of spying for Taiwan, admitted in a US court illegally exporting militarily sensitive US computer technology to China.

AFP/HO/File Photo

Reuters Slideshow: Gao Zhan

In a sensational twist to a saga which soured US-China relations two years ago, Gao pleaded guilty to exporting 80 micro-processors to China without required authorization from the US Department of Commerce.

The charge covered a transaction in October 2000, three months before Gao was arrested in China and accused of spying for Taiwan.

In a plea bargain deal, Gao, mother of a young boy, also confessed at federal court in Arlington, Virginia, to filing a false joint tax return with her husband Xue Donghua, which did not include most of the proceeds of the sales, worth 1.5 million dollars.

Sentencing was set for March 5.

In theory, the maximum penalty for her offenses is 13 years in jail and a half a million dollars in fines. But a US official said under the plea bargain, Gao could face a maximum of 37 months behind bars, and in all probability prosecutors would ask for less.

Xue told reporters on Wednesday after emerging from the courtroom that the couple remained in the US government's debt.

US officials "tried almost everything to bring her back, and we love this country," he said.

Gao, an academic researcher and US permanent resident, became a cause celebre in Washington after she was held for five and a half months in China in 2001, accused of spying for Taiwan.

Sentenced to 10 years in jail by a Chinese court, she was released on July 26, 2001, just days before a visit to Beijing by US Secretary of State Colin Powell (news - web sites).

According to court documents, Gao sent 80 MG80486 DX2-50 microprocessors to Nanjing Research Institute of Electronics technology, which makes state of the art radar systems for the Chinese military.

The processors can be used in navigation, flight control and weapons control systems and can help missiles home in on their targets, the documents said.

For national security reasons, such components require a Commerce Department (news - web sites) License before they can be exported to China.

Gao's lawyers argued that the case resulted from a misunderstanding, saying she believed that the company was a civilian one and that the parts involved all had civilian and commercial uses.

Under the plea bargain, Gao is required to cooperate with US authorities investigating the export of illegal items to China.

Gao's court appearance on Wednesday completed a spectacular fall from grace after she emerged as a human rights icon when she was arrested and charged by China with spying for Taiwan in February 2001.

Her fate, and that of her husband Xue, and then five-year-old son captured the hearts of human rights campaigners here, who mounted a campaign for her freedom.

Her release followed fierce diplomatic pressure from Washington, and was seen at the time as an olive branch to Powell before he arrived in Beijing at a time of high Sino-US tensions.

Gao spent five and a half months in Chinese jails.

At the time of her arrest, Xue and the couple's then five-year-old son, Andrew, a US citizen, were held separately for 26 days before being released, but Gao herself was charged with spying for Taiwan.

She was sentenced to 10 years in prison before being released on medical grounds.


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: china; chinese; gaozhan

1 posted on 11/26/2003 5:33:40 PM PST by Lake
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To: Lake
US officials "tried almost everything to bring her back, and we love this country," he said.
How naively he misconstrues our intentions. We simply wanted to kill her first. She is as Alcibiades was between the Athenians and the Persians: one who played both sides, one who ended up deader than a moon rock still on the moon.
2 posted on 11/26/2003 5:38:08 PM PST by Asclepius (karma vigilante)
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To: Lake; Mia T
I wonder where the tie-in with Clinton is?

MG80486 DX2-50

Is that a pre- Pentium chip? My first Compaq had a 486-DX-4 100mhz

3 posted on 11/26/2003 5:44:40 PM PST by Delta 21
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To: Delta 21
I wondered that too. The MG throws me off though. Intel chips are all iXXX i386 i486 i8086. The DX was used by intel for sure. I did a google search on the string and found US Bids website, they will help you buy them.

Anything that can be bought easily over the internet is already in China, in my humble opinion.

Clinton destroyed export rules, Bush has not really fixed them. Aren't exports still done by commerce? (Ron Brown, he of the famous .45 caliber plane crash, proprieter) Not State, or Defense.

The PlayStation has a pretty but kicking CPU in it, I bet a smart hacker could use it for telemetry.

4 posted on 11/26/2003 7:22:36 PM PST by Jack Black
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To: Lake
Looks to me like she would be stuck either way.

Stay in China= get arrested.

Come to the US=get arrested.

Moral of the story, if you are going to break the law, you better be good at it.

Also, if you piss off one side, thats ok. If you piss off the other thats ok. If you piss off both, thats not ok.

5 posted on 11/26/2003 7:49:05 PM PST by maui_hawaii
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To: Lake
I think she rightfully though chose the right side.

In the end she did the right thing.

I don't know all the details of her life...but if she admitted to a wrong doing and tried to set it right...thats better than nothing.

6 posted on 11/26/2003 8:00:04 PM PST by maui_hawaii
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To: Jack Black
Mil spec or mil grade, I would guess. The numbers are real.
7 posted on 11/26/2003 10:20:34 PM PST by flamefront (To the victor go the oils. No oil or oil-money for islamofascist weapons of mass annihilation.)
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To: Lake; Dog; Miss Marple; Howlin; Grampa Dave; JohnHuang2; Utah Girl; Mr. Mulliner
I heard a very confusing and non-informative CBS radio news update on this story this afternoon. The details were so nebulous that I wondered why they even bothered to report it. There was mention of someone selling sensitive equipment to China and something about a controversy between the US and China in the summer of 2001 .... a strong implication that the event happened during the Bush administration. There was not one word mentioned of the transaction occurring during the previous administration.

Does CBS have an agenda? I report ... you decide.

I must admit to being quite surprised when I heard it and wondering when this really happened. This article confirms my suspicions.

8 posted on 11/26/2003 10:36:18 PM PST by kayak (The Vast, Right-Wing Conspiracy is truly Vast! [JohnHuang2])
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To: maui_hawaii
>>I think she rightfully though chose the right side.

You may never know. Looks like she's a for-profit spy who chooses whatever side that pays more.
9 posted on 11/27/2003 12:08:37 AM PST by Lake
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