[ISN] New charges expected in defense data theft ring

InfoSec News isn at c4i.org
Wed May 17 01:44:51 EDT 2006


http://www.washtimes.com/national/20060515-110139-9264r.htm

By Bill Gertz
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
May 16, 2006 

Federal prosecutors are expected to add new charges against several
people in Los Angeles linked to a covert program to provide China with
Navy defense technology and at least one will be charged with
espionage, U.S. government officials said.
    
Defense contractor Chi Mak and his wife, Rebecca Laiwah Chiu, along
with brother Tai Mak were arrested last year and charged with failing
to register as Chinese government agents after a yearlong
counterespionage probe.
    
Documents obtained after the Oct. 28 arrests provided investigators
with new clues about the technology theft ring that included
proprietary corporate information and embargoed defense technology
related to Navy warships, officials said. Investigators think the spy
ring passed the sensitive data to Beijing.
    
The charges, which will be made public as early as this week, will
include a new indictment against Chi Mak, Tai Mak, Mrs. Chiu and a
fourth Mak relative. All four will be charged with conspiracy to
export defense articles and attempted unlawful export of defense
articles.
    
Additionally, Chi Mak, an electrical engineer with the Los Angeles
defense contractor Power Paragon, will be indicted on charges of
unlawful export of defense articles and gathering defense information,
an espionage charge, the officials said.
    
Chi Mak is thought to have supplied China with sensitive information
about the electrical systems of U.S. warships and submarines,
including details of the Virginia-class submarine, and information on
a new electromagnetic catapult to launch jets from aircraft carriers.
    
A spokesman for the U.S. attorney in Los Angeles declined to comment,
but Assistant U.S. Attorney Gregory Staples said in court last week
that the government is expected to seek a new indictment in the case.
He did not specify the new charges.
    
Senior Justice Department officials have approved the new charges,
which prosecutors will announce in Los Angeles, said the officials,
who spoke on the condition of anonymity.
    
Chi, Tai and Rebecca Mak have pleaded not guilty to the original
charges in the case.
    
"We presented evidence throughout this case that undermines the
government's conclusion that these individuals were involved in
espionage," Ronald Kaye, Chi Mak's attorney, said in an interview. An
attorney for Mrs. Chiu, Stanley Greenberg, said he is confident that
his client will be found not guilty. An attorney for Tai Mak could not
be reached for comment.
    
U.S. officials described Tai Mak, an engineer with Phoenix Television,
as an intelligence courier for the Chinese military who was carrying
an encrypted computer disk holding defense technology data when he was
arrested.
    
Tai Mak also will be charged with aiding and abetting and possession
of property to aid a foreign government. He and his wife were arrested
at Los Angeles International Airport as they were about to fly to Hong
Kong. Tai Mak was carrying an encrypted disk that FBI officials said
contained data on a new technology for destroyers known as quiet
electric drive.
    
Earlier charges that Chi Mak, Tai Mak and Rebecca Mak failed to
register as Chinese government agents will be kept in the new
indictment.
    
Chi and Tai Mak were born in Guangzhou, China.
    
The new charges were based on thousands of pages of documents found at
the home of Chi Mak, officials said.

Copyright 2006 The Washington Times





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