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Spy
Charges In High-Stakes Microchip Race
By JOSH GERSTEIN - Staff Reporter of the Sun
SAN FRANCISCO - China's effort to acquire secrets from Silicon Valley's
high-tech industry is facing renewed scrutiny after federal prosecutors filed
new charges of economic espionage in the high-stakes race to improve microchip
design.
Lan Lee, 42, of Palo Alto, and Yuefei Ge, 34, of San Jose, were arrested
Friday after a grand jury charged them with theft of trade secrets and
conspiracy. The two men allegedly conspired to steal technical descriptions of a
chip in development by their employer, Net-Logic Microsystems of Mountain View.
The pair also is accused of swiping chip design software from the Taiwan
Semi-Conductor Manufacturing Company, which has facilities in San Jose.
"A tremendous amount of resources go into producing the chips and
software that are designated as trade secrets, and we are committed to the
prosecution of individuals who steal those trade secrets in an attempt to get an
unfair advantage in the technology industry," the U.S. attorney for
Northern California, Kevin Ryan, said in a statement.
Mr. Lee, who is an American citizen, and Mr. Ge, who is a national of the
People's Republic of China, appeared before a federal magistrate in San Jose on
Friday and were released on a $300,000 bond, the statement said. No pleas have
been entered in the case.
An attorney for Mr. Lee, Thomas Nolan, said in a brief interview yesterday
that he was caught off guard by the indictment, which stems from alleged events
in 2003.
"To the best of our knowledge, there hasn't been anything
happening," Mr. Nolan said. "I'm surprised to hear about this after
over two years."
Mr. Ge's attorney, John Williams, could not be reached for comment yesterday.
A consultant who advises firms on protecting trade secrets, Steven Fink of
Los Angeles-based Lexicon Communications, said schemes to steal proprietary
information are having a staggering impact on American businesses. "It's
going on all the time, every day, and every company is at risk," he said.
"The theft of trade secrets is the single biggest crisis facing American
business today. It accounts for $250 billion a year in losses."
The indictment accuses Messrs. Lee and Ge of setting up their own Delaware
corporation, SICO Microsystems Incorporated, to obtain venture capital based on
stolen secrets about 130-nanometer microchips.
"That was pretty state-of-the-art then. Right now, it's standard
production for the big companies, but back then it was new," an adviser on
valuing intellectual property, Lloyd Nirenberg of Los Gatos, told The New York
Sun. "To have those parameters is a big deal. To know what the
competition's parameters are is a big deal,"
According to the indictment, Mr. Lee's home computer contained a contract
under which SICO would get capital from a company based in mainland China,
Beijing Electronic Development Company Limited.
FBI and customs officials told USA Today last month that China is the leading
espionage threat to America. According to an FBI tally provided to the
newspaper, 25 Chinese nationals or Chinese Americans have been arrested in
technology-related cases in the past two years, a figure the agency said was
unprecedented.
Last month, a Taiwanese businessman, Ko-Suen Moo, pleaded guilty in Miami to
charges he attempted to purchase cruise missiles and military parts for
communist China. In southern California, five members of one family are facing
federal charges in connection with an alleged scheme to smuggle to China secrets
about American Navy warships.
However, Mr. Fink said the American government's overall track record at
punishing and preventing economic espionage is weak. "The government has
not effectively and not successfully prosecuted these cases," he said.
"Most of these cases end in plea bargains. Take a look at what the original
charges were and what sentences were received. In almost every case, they are
slaps on the wrist."
Mr. Fink said the new chip-theft charges are reminiscent of a case filed
in New Jersey in 2001 against three men accused of stealing sophisticated
computer software developed by Lucent Technologies for handling voice calls over
the Internet. The program, called PathStar, was reportedly generating $100
million in annual sales for Lucent shortly before the alleged theft.
The PathStar case, which was announced with great fanfare, has since
petered out. One of the defendants, Hai Lin, jumped bail in 2004 and, according
to prosecutors, has probably returned to China. Last year, the charges against
the other two defendants, Kai Xu and Yong-Qing Cheng, were dropped, after the
technology firm the trio founded agreed to pay a $250,000 fine.
"Do the math," Mr. Fink said. "Look at the potential versus
the risk. It's worth it."
While Messrs. Lee and Ge were charged under the Economic Espionage Act,
passed in 1996, they were not charged under a provision that applies to crimes
that "benefit any foreign government, foreign instrumentality, or foreign
agent."
Mr. Fink said the State Department has discouraged use of that provision,
which carries harsher penalties, perhaps for fear of causing diplomatic upset.
If convicted on all charges, Messrs. Lee and Ge face the possibility of up to
60 years in prison and fines of up to $1.5 million. However, the men would
likely be sentenced in accordance with federal guidelines that provide for more
lenient punishment in most cases.
June 19, 2006
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