Posted on 07/03/2014 8:47:07 AM PDT by afraidfortherepublic
Three years ago, a security guard working for seed company Pioneer Hi-Bred came across something unusual on a road in Iowa: Just off the pavement, a man was on his knees, digging in a field.
Challenged by the guard, Mo Hailong claimed to be an employee of the University of Iowa who was traveling to a nearby conference. He jumped back in his car and sped away.
U.S. authorities would later accuse Hailong, and five other Chinese nationals, of stealing corn seeds and attempting to smuggle them back to China.
A seventh defendant, Mo Yun, was arrested and charged Wednesday with stealing trade secrets for her husband's seed company -- the Beijing Dabeinong Technology Group Company.
The details of the case, laid out by prosecutors, underscore the difficulty of safeguarding U.S. intellectual property, and the determination of some foreign rivals to acquire technology by illicit means.
For six years, the Chinese nationals hopscotched across rural Iowa and Illinois, stealing valuable inbred corn seed from Pioneer, Monsanto (MON) and LG Seeds, prosecutors said in an updated indictment. The group rented storage facilities, bought their own testing field and concocted elaborate cover stories.
"These are actually very serious offenses," one of the accused said during a recorded conversation reproduced in the indictment. "They could treat us as spies," his colleague replied.
Three members of the group tried to smuggle the stolen goods out of the U.S. in 2012, concealing hundreds of seeds in Orville Redenbacher popcorn boxes and Subway napkins. One tried to reach Canada; the others boarded aircraft bound for Beijing.
(Excerpt) Read more at money.cnn.com ...
Most countries are trying to keep our gmo stuff out. lol
Because 75% of their economy is dependent upon stuff they already stole from the US?
Popcorn.
While they watch the greatest nation on earth implode.
already the Chinese can build a space satellite out of used slinky’s ... can you imagine what they could do with a few thousand hectares of super (albeit, modified) corn ?
Because it’s cheaper to steal than to do the research for yourself.
Every commie chinaman I’ve met was a lying thief. I leave honeypots for them. It can be quite fun.
Not when you have Slick Willie as your front man. It doesn’t cost anything then.
We are not going to implode. The groaning and straining you hear is America about to take a cataclysmic dump. When that stool is passed, the Taker class, bureaucrats, Muslims, Urban Ferals, Latrinos, ad nauseam - all will get a “Swirly” that will long be remembered.
Seeing how I don’t believe in Patented seeds and have a particular animosity towards Monsanto I can loudly proclaim that I don’t care. The more food for the world the merrier.
They could just buy them, the seed stocks used by the hybrid seed corn companies do this all the time - they buy the inbred parent seed from the breeding farms (usually maintained by the Land Grant University of any of the participating states), where the pure lines are kept, then the seed is planted in “male” and “female” rows when grown to produce the F1 hybrid seed corn. The F1 crop does NOT breed true when planted to produce the F2 generation, nor is it a good example of the hybrid qualities being sought.
Clinton wouldn't do anything for free. Stealing is cheaper.
China however, isn’t scared of shadows. They want to eat.
Heck, we’ve been selling them our balance sheet in order to prop up our income statement for decades.
Some day we should just send China a bill for a trillion or two and cancel any US debt they hold. Their violations of US patents and copyrights and all sorts of product counterfeiting would easily run into the trillions over the past several decades.
That’s called a Default ... and it’s coming.
A point has been made to me about GMO
How many people have died from malnutrition?
How many people have died from GMO?
Kinda favors GMO, doesn’t it?
There’s an inspired thought. I’ll subscribe to your newsletter.
No, with China it would be called a valuation of stolen property applied against our outstanding debt.
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