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Two of the three other defendants sentenced along with Xue on Monday were school mates. Chen Mengjin and Li Dongxu, who worked for research institutes affiliated with PetroChina were each given two-and-a-half-year sentences and fined 50,000 yuan ($7,500). The other defendant, Li Yongbo, a manager at Beijing Licheng Zhongyou Oil Technology Development Co., was sentenced to eight years and fined 200,000 yuan ($30,000). Li and Xue arranged the sale of the database which was originally prepared by a Chinese company for PetroChina's parent company and contained details on the coordinates and volume of reserves for the 30,000 wells, to IHS for $228,500, the court's sentencing document said. Executives with IHS, based in Englewood, Colorado, could not immediately be reached for comment. In the past, a company spokesman has said that Chinese authorities never notified IHS that it was involved in any wrongdoing. During his closed-door trial, which ran over three dates last July and in December, the court document said Xue defended himself, arguing that the information he gathered "is data that the oil sector in countries around the world make public." David Rowley, Xue's thesis adviser at University of Chicago and a geologist, said that the location and seismic and other data of oil wells is commonly available and could not compromise Chinese security since the government controls access. "What frightens me most about this is that Xue Feng is, in my experience, a straight-up individual who worked hard, who didn't push limits, or try to pull a fast one by, but was simply honest and entirely well meaning," Rowley said in an e-mail. "That's IHS's business
-- acquiring and redistributing data (bases) so he was simply doing his job." In rejecting Xue and his lawyer's arguments that no crime had been committed, the court cited the National Administration for the Protection of State Secrets as saying that the information Xue received on China National Petroleum Corp. was classified as either secret or confidential. The court document indirectly acknowledged the difficulties Xue and IHS would have collecting data in such a restrictive environment. "IHS Co. has information exchange agreements with many oil companies, but exchanging information with Chinese oil companies is very difficult. Because China controls energy information relatively strictly, IHS Co.'s information and data on China are not very complete," the sentencing statement cited one witness as telling the court.
[Associated
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