The U.S. Justice Department released the below information:
Shujun
Wang, 75, a naturalized U.S. citizen of Chinese descent, an academic and author
who helped start a pro-democracy organization in Queens, New York, that opposes
the current communist regime in the People’s Republic of China (PRC), was
convicted today on all four counts of an indictment charging him with acting
and conspiring to act as an agent of a foreign government without prior
notification to the U.S. Attorney General, criminal use of identification and
making false statements to law enforcement.
“This defendant infiltrated a New York-based advocacy group by
masquerading as a pro-democracy activist all while covertly collecting and
reporting sensitive information about its members to the PRC’s intelligence
service,” said Assistant Attorney General Matthew G. Olsen of the Justice
Department’s National Security Division. “Today’s verdict demonstrates that
those who would seek to advance the Chinese government’s agenda of
transnational repression will be held accountable.”
“The indictment could have been the plot of a John LeCarre or
Graham Greene spy novel, but the evidence is shockingly real that the defendant
led a double life, pretending for years to be an activist for democracy while
he was secretly passing information to the Chinese government,” said U.S.
Attorney Breon Peace for the Eastern District of New York. “The defendant was a
perfect stooge for the PRC, a well-known academic and founder of a
pro-democracy organization who was willing to betray those who respected and
trusted him. When confronted with his shameful conduct, Wang lied to the FBI,
but today’s verdict revealed the truth of his crimes and now he will face the
consequences.”
“This conviction underscores the FBI’s commitment to countering
espionage schemes by holding those accountable who collect U.S. activist
information for the benefit of China,” said Executive Assistant Director Robert
Wells of the FBI’s National Security Branch. “Any support for transnational
repression is unacceptable, and the FBI works diligently with its partners to
seek out and bring to justice those who support such activities.”
Wang is one of the founders of the pro-democracy Hu Yaobang and
Zhao Ziyang Memorial Foundation, an organization located in Flushing, Queens,
whose members are well-known pro-democracy dissidents who oppose the current
government of the PRC. But instead of promoting democracy in the PRC, Wang, at
the direction of PRC government officials, used his position within the
Memorial Foundation and his status within the Chinese diaspora community to
collect information about prominent activists, academics and dissidents, and
reported that information to the PRC government.
According to court documents, since at least 2006, Wang operated
under the direction and control of his co-defendants – four officials of
China’s Ministry of State Security, which is responsible for the PRC’s foreign
intelligence collection. At the MSS’ direction, Wang gathered information on
people and groups that the PRC considers subversive, such as Hong Kong
democracy protestors, advocates for Taiwanese independence and Uyghur and
Tibetan activists, both in the United States and abroad. Wang conducted face-to-face
meetings with MSS officials while on trips to the PRC and used an encrypted
messaging application to receive taskings from his co-defendants and to send
and receive written messages and files.
Wang often memorialized the information he collected in email
“diaries” to be accessed by the MSS. These “diaries” included details about
Wang’s private conversations with prominent dissidents, as well as the
activities of pro-democracy activists and human rights organizations. Law
enforcement recovered from Wang’s residence approximately 163 “diary” entries
that he wrote to He, Ji, Li and Lu and other MSS officials. Additionally, in
connection with his work for the MSS, Wang possessed telephone numbers and
contact information belonging to Chinese dissidents.
Wang made materially false statements to federal law
enforcement, falsely denying that he had contacts with PRC officials or the
MSS. Over the course of three separate interviews, between 2017 to 2021, Wang
repeatedly denied having any contact with individuals from the Chinese
intelligence agency. During one of the interviews, in 2019, Wang was
interviewed by federal law enforcement agents at John F. Kennedy Internation
Airport in Queens, after he returned from China. Wang falsely stated that he
had no contact with anyone from the Chinese government and that he had no
Chinese government contact information.
The verdict followed a one-week trial. Wang’s co-defendants in
the espionage and transnational repression scheme, Feng He, Jie Ji, Ming Li and
Keqing Lu are MSS officials who remain at large. Wang is scheduled to be
sentenced on Jan. 9, 2025 and faces up to 25 years in prison. A federal
district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S.
Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.
Assistant U.S. Attorneys Ellen Sise and Nina Gupta for the Eastern District of New York and Trial Attorney Garrett Coyle of the National Security Division’s Counterintelligence and Export Control Section prosecuted the case.
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