Chinese national charged with hacking
U.S. defense contractors
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[August 16, 2014]
By Daniel Wiessner
(Reuters) - A Chinese businessman has been
indicted in California on charges he hacked the computer systems of
Boeing Co and other U.S. defense contractors and stole confidential
plans for military aircraft, federal prosecutors said on Friday.
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According to the indictment in federal court in Los Angeles, Su
Bin traveled to the United States at least 10 times between 2008 and
2014 and worked with two unidentified co-conspirators based in China
to steal the data.
Prosecutors said the trio stole plans relating to the C-17 military
transport plane and F-22 and F-35 fighter jets, and attempted to
sell them to Chinese companies.
Su is charged with unauthorized computer access, stealing trade
secrets and violating federal laws that require a license from the
U.S. State Department to export defense-related technical data. He
faces up to 30 years in prison.
Su was arrested in June in Canada, where he was attempting to
establish residency, according to the Federal Bureau of
Investigation.
Court documents did not list an attorney for Su.
U.S. officials have identified industrial spying as a significant
and growing threat. Federal prosecutors in May charged five Chinese
military officers with hacking into American companies to steal
trade secrets.
China, angered by those allegations, shut down a bilateral working
group on cybersecurity.
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The case is USA v. Su Bin, U.S. District Court for the Central
District of California, No. cr-14-0131.
(Reporting by Daniel Wiessner; Additional reporting by Dan Levine;
Editing by Ted Botha and Tom Brown)
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