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Chinese citizen in US arrested for acting as foreign agent

The Department of Justice (DOJ) logo is pictured on a wall after a news conference in New York December 5, 2013. (Photo by Reuters)

US authorities have arrested a Chinese citizen living in Chicago over accusations of spying on American engineers and scientists, including defense contractors, on behalf of the Chinese government.

The US Department of Justice (DOJ) announced in a press release on Tuesday that Ji Chaoqun had been arrested for "working at the direction of a high-level intelligence officer" in the Ministry of State Security for China.

The 27-year-old suspect was charged with one count of knowingly acting in the US as an agent of a foreign government without prior notification of the attorney general, US federal prosecutors said.

The DOJ claimed that Ji had targeted eight individuals for possible recruitment, among them Chinese nationals working as engineers and scientists in the US, some for defense contractors.

Reports said Ji came to the US in 2013 on a student visa to study engineering at the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago. He received his masters in 2015 and then enlisted in the US Army Reserves in 2016.

The suspect appeared in court in Chicago for an initial appearance on Tuesday afternoon but it was not immediately clear how he pleaded.

While Ji remains innocent until proven guilty, he could face up to 10 years in prison if convicted for the one account, the Justice Department noted.

Ji’s arrest took place on the same day Dan Coats, the US director of national intelligence, issued a stark warning about Chinese espionage, the latest in a series of statements by US security officials sounding the alarm about what they claimed as the intelligence threat posed by China.

“From its continued hacking of our defense secrets to its focus on collecting vast repositories of personal and personality-identifying information to better enable espionage activities, China exploits our transparency and open society,” Coats said in remarks at a military college in South Carolina.

The latest arrest follows the indictment of Jerry Chun Shing Lee, a former CIA officer, earlier this year, who was charged over accusations of conspiring to give Beijing information about the CIA’s operations in the country. The American citizen, who worked for the CIA from 1994 to 2007, has pleaded not guilty.


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