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China Government The Courts

All Charges Dropped Against MIT Professor Accused of Hiding Ties to China (masslive.com) 47

Remember that MIT professor accused of hiding the work he did for the Chinese government? (He was arrested for not disclosing it on federal grant applications, with a U.S. attorney announcing "It is not illegal to collaborate with foreign researchers. It is illegal to lie about it.")

All charges have been dropped. Mass Live reports: Chen, 56, was arrested a year ago for failing to disclose millions of dollars in contracts, appointments and awards from the Chinese government when he applied for a grant from the Department of Energy. Among other charges, he was accused of wire fraud and making a false statement on a tax return, according to prosecutors. He pleaded not guilty to the full slate of charges. On Thursday, U.S. Attorney Rachael Rollins said the federal government would drop its case against Chen. After assessing new evidence, Rollins said in a statement her office found it could not meet the burden of proof in a trial. "As prosecutors, we have an obligation in every matter we pursue to continually examine the facts while being open to receiving and uncovering new information," Rollins said. "Today's dismissal is a result of that process and is in the interests of justice...." Prosecutors had claimed Chen used the U.S. government's money to benefit the Chinese government, while failing to disclose any relationship with Chinese leaders. Colleagues protested Chen's arrest, saying grant disclosure violations had been treated as a serious crime, such as espionage or intellectual property theft, the New York Times reported. Recently, Department of Energy officials said they would awarded a grant to him even if he had disclosed his ties to China.
MIT Technology Review adds: From the start, Chen had maintained his innocence, while MIT had indicated that he was working to establish a research collaboration on behalf of the institution and that the funding in question was actually for the university rather than Chen personally. MIT also paid for his defense....

"The government finally acknowledged what we said all along: Professor Gang Chen is an innocent man," Robert Fisher, Chen's defense attorney, said in a statement. "Our defense was never based on any legal technicalities. Gang did not commit any of the offenses he was charged with. Full stop. He was never in a talent program. He was never an overseas scientist for Beijing. He disclosed everything that he was supposed to disclose and never lied to the government or anyone else."

For his part, Chen said, "While I am relieved that my ordeal is over, I am mindful that this terribly misguided China Initiative continues to bring unwarranted fear to the academic community, and other scientists still face charges."

"I will have more to share soon," the scientist added.

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All Charges Dropped Against MIT Professor Accused of Hiding Ties to China

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  • Before the Department of Justice tries to lay other charges back on the Chen, Gang [youtu.be]?
  • by hdyoung ( 5182939 ) on Sunday January 23, 2022 @03:47PM (#62200061)
    To protect an academic who runs afoul of powerful people while pursuing their academic discipline. I’m glad the university had his back.

    Don’t get me wrong. Things with China are a bit tense right now and the government SHOULD keep tabs on people who do lots of stuff over the border. But, they’re supposed to watch and listen, WITHOUT INTERFERING, until they are SURE someone has stepped over the line into espionage, BEFORE opening up with charges.

    I’ve also seen academics abuse their tenure, hiding behind it while they spout off about political issues way outside their discipline. But in this case, it appears to have served its purpose.

    The US government has pulled this hair-trigger crap before. You’d think they would learn. I wish MIT could countersue somehow.
    • while they spout off about political issues way outside their discipline

      "Spouting off" is called "freedom of speech" in the Bill of Rights. It comes fairly high up that list, if I remember correctly. And if you object to academics speaking "outside their discipline", wouldn't that imply that less educated people should shut up completely?

    • The police state is why this person was persecuted and why taxpayer money was wasted. My understanding is the government has a good case of tax fraud, maybe money laundering. He failed to disclose , which happens all the time and is generally an issue when it is political and involves actual terrorist stuff.

      However the dogma and bigotry caused the US to overstate its case. MIT being a polytechnic and not a real research university of course believes their can be undue influence in research. The rest of kn

      • To me it looks more a result 'propaganda state' than 'police state'. Once the anti-China (or Russia )mood is set the crowd is eager to persecute anyone in proximity of China relations upon the flimsiest of excuses. As you can see in this thread there is a solemn conviction all around not to let the dismissal of this case against an MIT professor diminish the anti-China mood in any way. In a climate like that it becomes impossible so say anything which could be deemed sympathetic to the adversary.
        My controve

        • by fermion ( 181285 )
          Look at McCarthism during the Cold War and McCarthism today. It is all propaganda to promote the police state
          • Maybe it is only a matter of emphasis but with mob rule there is voluntary and enthusiastic support from a large part of the crowd. With police state the emphasis is on being too scared not to support the movement.
            You don't need a police state to whip up a collective frenzy against an external enemy but it combines well.
            So how much of each do we have? I say that the 'propagandized mob' component is large.

    • That is a very sane, rational and moderate position which includes a nod to the legitimate points underlying the opposed extreme positions on the matter. You sir are a unicorn in the modern political climate. *tips hat*
  • How can you post a story and miss out the crucial part ?

    Was it okay because "the funding in question was actually for the university rather than Chen personally." ?

    Or becaue there was not enough proof ?

    Or WHAT ?

    Do your job.

    • I would expect that the trial would reveal secrets, and one year in jail, plus the scare to others doing shady espionage with China was useful for the DOJ.
      Obviously, I have no proof.
    • by isdnip ( 49656 ) on Sunday January 23, 2022 @07:46PM (#62200489)

      Other articles on the topic point out that much the specific "evidence" against him was factually wrong, and the government ignored it when it was pointed out to them. The Former Guy's administration was out to make China and Chinese-Americans look bad. Lelling, then the US Attorney, was playing along with the racist fraud. Rollins, the new one, correctly dropped the charges.

    • The charges were dropped because the prosecutor indicated they didn't have enough evidence. Both the prosecution and the charges being dropped are almost certainly due to politics.

      On the one hand the guy is almost certainly guilty of colluding with mainland China, on the other that wasn't being considered a major concern until relations with them turned hostile. Politics.

      MIT defends him because A he is a professor at their school and B they currently make huge money catering primarily to foreign students fr
  • American lawyers are (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Kelxin ( 3417093 ) on Sunday January 23, 2022 @03:53PM (#62200077)
    Majoritively dipshits that are there for either the money or the win, but have no interest in what the truth is or who is actually guilty of what. So many times I've seen a city, county or state pressing charges against someone, but when talking to the victim they say nothing happened and the government won't listen to them. In circumstances like this, I think it needs to be "locked" into prosecution, and come up as a loss for the prosecutor so they might stop randomly filling frivolous charges against people.
  • They get a pass as usual. Besides the DOJ and FBI have real terrorist to track at the local PTA meetings.
    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      Ya, its the right of every gun-totin' American parent to threaten school board members.

    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      Given the right wing-nut jobs out there, why would you expect to be able to threaten your local school board members and not get some extra scrutiny? The FBI now says right-wing extremists are a bigger threat than the Islamo-Fascists. And given the right wing-nuts affinity for Christianity, how are two groups different?

  • McCarthyism (Score:5, Insightful)

    by peppepz ( 1311345 ) on Sunday January 23, 2022 @03:58PM (#62200095)
    ...is still a thing in 2022.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by haunebu ( 16326 )

      Apples and oranges. If you think the Chinese Community Party doesn't have infiltrators pillaging intellectual property from each and every American university and major technology company you are simply naive. That very real issue has no similarity whatsoever to political witch hunts from 50 years ago.

      • Re: McCarthyism (Score:5, Insightful)

        by peppepz ( 1311345 ) on Sunday January 23, 2022 @04:22PM (#62200155)

        a mid-20th century political attitude characterized chiefly by opposition to elements held to be subversive and by the use of tactics involving personal attacks on individuals by means of widely publicized indiscriminate allegations especially on the basis of unsubstantiated charges

        From the definition of the term in Merriam-Webster, emphasis mine.

        • But one could split hairs and say that the real crime of McCarthyism had nothing to do with routing out foreign agents but rather was about preventing exposure to communist/socialist ideas even in principle to the American people because they were afraid that might lead to people questioning the status quo in the USA. That was why it was so important to McCarthy to attack people in entertainment and the arts because you know that's how they corrupt our youth. /sarcasm

          At same time you're right because "but

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        ... and the Soviet Communist Party was in fact trying to infiltrate, spy on, and generally destabilize the US in the 1950s. They did in fact have a lot of spies. They did in fact try to put their real or perceived sympathizers in positions of influence. They did in fact create, fund, and/or try to influence a lot of organizations. Which still didn't excuse stupid panicky indiscriminate life-ruining.

        Neither does what the Chinese Communist Party is doing now.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        And yet there is surprisingly little evidence of this. I'm sure people would be posting it if there was strong evidence, but instead all we get is "Huawei copied a few header files from an SDK 20 years ago!"

        It's also simply naive to think that every other country doesn't do the same. The UK is known to steal IP, and France is notorious for it. The advice used to be not to do any work related stuff on an Air France flight, and it was actually a bit of a problem for their business class revenue at one point.

  • ."It is not illegal to collaborate with foreign researchers." That law could be passed easily and a lot fewer scientists would work in the USA. Just as the 112th Republican Congress passed the Public Law 112-55, SEC. 539 prohibiting NASA from collaborating with China in space.
  • Because Biden does not want to cross China?

  • Is he a Double Agent?

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