Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

U.S. citizen sentenced for spying for Beijing highlights reach of China’s security service
Just the News ^ | November 28, 2024 | Steven Richards

Posted on 11/30/2024 5:13:37 AM PST by george76

China has emerged as the most prolific intelligence threat to U.S. having engaged in corporate espionage, intellectual-property theft, and personnel information breaches going back decades.

A naturalized U.S. citizen who immigrated from China has been sentenced to four years in prison after conspiring to act as a agent of the Chinese government, highlighting the broad reach of Beijing’s security service and strategy of co-opting immigrants for intelligence gathering, according to the Justice Department.

The plea agreement and court filings announced Monday show China’s Ministry of State Security – the Communist-run country's intelligence service – used operative Peng Li as a “cooperative contact” in the decades since he moved to the United States while he worked for a major U.S. telecommunications company and an international information technology company, the agency says.

In recent years, China has emerged as the most prolific intelligence threat to the United States. The country has engaged in corporate espionage, intellectual property theft, and personnel information breaches going back decades.

The MSS is also noted for recruiting Chinese nationals residing abroad as assets to gather information, keep tabs on dissidents and influence expatriate communities.

Peng Li, who lived in Florida, reportedly worked for decades at U.S.-based Verizon and subsequently for the Indian company InfoSys, exemplifies the MSS’s strategy of co-opting Chinese residing abroad for intelligence work.

In his role at the companies, Li, under the direction of MSS officers, obtained information that was of interest to the Chinese government. This included information about Chinese dissidents, members of the minority religious movement known as the Falun Gong, and U.S.-based non-governmental organizations, according to the DOJ.

His contact in the security service was a former schoolmate with whom he attended high school and college. Li remained friends with the officer after he moved to the United States decades ago, according to the Tampa Bay Times.

Li also discussed sensitive cybersecurity and hacking with an MSS during his several trips back to China.

Recently, the U.S. government discovered that a Chinese hacking group named Salt Typhoon orchestrated a wide-ranging breach of American telecommunications networks that reportedly permits Beijing to listen in on telephone calls and read text messages.

Though much of the information Li provided to the MSS was publicly available, Assistant U.S. Attorney Daniel Marcet says it is impossible to assess the harm to American national security. Some of the information Li forwarded to his contact was related to cybersecurity matters.

“For more than 10 years, the defendant knowingly and willfully collaborated with a hostile foreign intelligence agency dedicated to undermining the United States’ national security,” the prosecutors wrote. “China’s intelligence activities are widely considered to be among the greatest long-term threats to the United States’ national security, intellectual property and economic vitality.”

In court, Li said that he did not understand what he had done was against U.S. law at the time.

“Looking back now, I realize how stupid and ignorant I was,” he said.

But Li is just one of many private citizens working to assist China’s vast espionage effort against its chief rival, the United States, the prosecutors in the case said.

“The Chinese government doesn’t just have one Mr. Li,” Marcet said, likening Beijing’s long-term strategy against the United States to “death by a thousand cuts.”

An analysis on Chinese espionage since 2000 by the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) found Beijing frequently employed private citizens or non-Chinese actors to achieve intelligence collection in addition to hacking.

For the espionage cases in which the organization could identify both the actor and intent, CSIS found that 41% of espionage cases included private Chinese citizens. Another 10% were “non-Chinese actors (usually U.S. persons recruited by Chinese officials).”

Together, the cases made up just more than half of all espionage recorded espionage incidents, followed closely by cyber espionage, which was involved in 46% of cases.

In October, the Justice Department charged five University of Michigan students from China after the National Guard discovered them in close proximity to a base hosting exercises. At the time they were let go and claimed to be members of the media.

However, the DOJ later found the Chinese nationals had planned the trip 200 miles from where they studied at the university to take photos of military vehicles at Camp Grayling. They were charged last month over their alleged attempts to cover up their real reason for traveling so close to the military base. Warrants were issued for their arrest, though the individuals’ whereabouts are unknown, Just the News previously reported.

Like the Florida case, the Michigan episode, one local expert said at the time, highlighted the United States’ continued vulnerabilities to Chinese Communist Party espionage.

“This is the third significant case of Chinese nationals charged with espionage by the FBI in the State of Michigan in recent years,” former Ambassador and current Director of the Michigan-China Economic and Security Review Initiative Joseph Cella said in a statement posted to the group’s X account.

“It shows the massive gaps in our national security and the urgent need for, on a whole of society and whole of government, including the states, to be on the proper footing commensurate to counter these espionage threats,” he continued.

Cella’s group has long warned of national security threats in the vicinity of Camp Grayling where the China-linked company, Gotion, plans to build an electric vehicle battery plant.

Their plans have spurred resistance from the local community and its dealings with the local Green Charter Township board are marred by accusations of bribery and conflicts of interest.

Cella says the charges against these Chinese nationals related to apparent attempts to spy on Camp Grayling vindicates the widespread concerns about Gotion’s proposed plant, which security experts previously testified would almost certainly be used as a launch pad for espionage.

In a similar case in 2020, two students were arrested in Key West, Florida, after driving on to the Sigsbee Annex Naval Air Station and photographing the property, including military structures.

A recent House Committee on Homeland Security probe into Chinese espionage found that from Jan. 2021 to Oct. 2024 there have been more than 50 Chinese-linked espionage events in 20 states.

“The Chinese Communist Party is not satisfied with destroying freedom and repressing its citizens within its own borders. Beijing has continually encroached upon American sovereignty to spy, intimidate, and harass not only defectors, but even American citizens,” said Rep. Mark Green, the committee chairman.


TOPICS: China; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: California; US: Florida; War
KEYWORDS: batteryplant; campgrayling; ccp; china; chinabadisraelok; chinesedissidents; chinesespies; chinesestudents; cybersecurity; dissidents; eavesdropping; espionage; florida; gotion; infosys; isolatedincidents; keywest; milbaseplots; mss; nationalsecurity; pengli; salttyphoon; spies; spooks; telecommunications; verizon

1 posted on 11/30/2024 5:13:37 AM PST by george76
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: george76

I suspect there are more arrests going on than we realize. I’ve seen several Chinese workers start at my company who you can tell recently immigrated over, only to quietly no longer show up for work less than 2 years later. I’ll leave it to the conspiracy theorists if they were arrested, sent on the run, or were harmless and just found other jobs.


2 posted on 11/30/2024 5:22:27 AM PST by Marko413
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: george76

but the aiding and abetting congress pukes like Feinstein and swalwell get a free pass and continue in office


3 posted on 11/30/2024 5:23:09 AM PST by ronnie raygun
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: george76
We need to remove all Mainland Chinese from our shores especially our universities .
Ban Them all .
They are all spies .
They all pledge allegiance to the CCP and required to spy for the CCP or else . Lets deport them all and see how much damage our stupidity has done .
4 posted on 11/30/2024 5:23:58 AM PST by ncalburt ( Gop DC Globalists are the evil)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: george76

Will some WARMONGER here please explain to me how we’re supposed to defeat China and Russia (at the same time) while allowing this crap to go on.

And no, I don’t expect an answers, as the warmongers here simply ‘compartmentalize’ it away, as they do for their support of Biden.


5 posted on 11/30/2024 5:32:05 AM PST by BobL
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: george76

IMO EVERY citizen of Red China present in a Western country is a spy...either economic,policitical or military. However,it’s possible that not all of them are *willing* spies. Some of them may have been approached by a Chinese official for the following chat:

“So,Comrade,you want to study engineering at MIT”

“Yes”

“While you’re there we want you to hack into various databases to get info for the Party...for the Great Helmsman”

“Gee,I like to just spend my time studying”

“Comrade,must we remind you that we know where your grandmother lives?”


6 posted on 11/30/2024 5:32:14 AM PST by Gay State Conservative (Import The Third World,Become The Third World)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: george76

More like death by 22,000 cuts. Biden welcomed every one of them illegally into the United States. And us tax payers are supporting them.


7 posted on 11/30/2024 5:35:25 AM PST by Flint
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: george76

‘Fairly shocking’: Secret medical lab in California stored bioengineered mice laden with COVID

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2023/07/31/illegal-lab-california-infectious-mice/70502532007/


8 posted on 11/30/2024 5:40:56 AM PST by Libloather (Why do climate change hoax deniers live in mansions on the beach?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: george76

But, the Chinese spys here are allowed to retire with full American taxpayer funded benefits.


9 posted on 11/30/2024 5:41:05 AM PST by Cowgirl of Justice
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: george76
China has emerged as the most prolific intelligence threat to U.S. having engaged in corporate espionage, intellectual-property theft, and personnel information breaches going back decades.

Yes but, RUSSIA RUSSIA RUSSIA!

10 posted on 11/30/2024 5:50:33 AM PST by BlackbirdSST (Trump or Bust! Long live the Republic.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: george76
Across from Omaha, Nebraska


11 posted on 11/30/2024 6:13:55 AM PST by Mean Daddy (Every time Hillary lies, a demon gets its wings. - Windflier)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: ronnie raygun

Feinstein and her 20+ year Chinese spy should have been investigated for espionage..


12 posted on 11/30/2024 6:14:44 AM PST by george76 (Ward Churchill : Fake Indian, Fake Scholarship, and Fake Art)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: ncalburt
Good start but these headlines are needed every week. China has infiltrated and purchased much of the US general aviation industry, the US Military commissioning committees feature a chinese spy or two, then at ever level of government there are chinese sleepers that are from 'Hong Kong' or 'First Generation' chinese.

Julie Su, Acting United States Secretary of Labor

Crazy huh?

Su was born in Madison, Wisconsin, as a second-generation American. Her mother, unable to afford a ticket on a passenger ship, came to the United States on a cargo ship from China

13 posted on 11/30/2024 8:01:26 AM PST by jdt1138 (Where ever you go, there you are.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson