Wednesday, March 12, 2025
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S’porean national pleads guilty to working as Chinese spy

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Washington: A Singaporean national on Friday pleaded guilty to charges of being a spy of China, the US Department of Justice said.
Jun Wei Yeo entered a plea of guilty to one count of acting within the United States as an illegal agent of a foreign power without first notifying the attorney general. ‘‘The Chinese government uses an array of duplicity to obtain sensitive information from unsuspecting Americans,” said US Assistant Attorney General for the Justice Department’s National Security Division John C Demers.
“Yeo was central to one such scheme, using career networking sites and a false consulting firm to lure Americans who might be of interest to the Chinese government. This is yet another example of the China’s exploitation of openness of American society,” he said.
The guilty plea underscores the ways that the Chinese government continues to target Americans with access to sensitive government data, including using the Internet and non-Chinese nationals to target Americans who never leave the US, said Michael R Sherwin, Acting US Attorney for the District of Columbia.
Yeo admitted that he not only provided valuable information to Chinese intelligence but also that he knowingly recruited others in the US to do the same, said FBI Washington Field Office Assistant Director in Charge Timothy R Slater.
“The tactics Yeo used to target cleared individuals on professional networking social media sites are just one facet of the full court press China employs on a daily basis to obtain non-public US government information. As per the guilty plea, Yeo began working with Chinese intelligence officers as early as 2015, initially targeting other Asian countries, but then focusing on the US,” Slater said.
After Yeo identified American targets, he solicited them for non-public information and paid them to write reports.
Yeo told these American targets that the reports were for clients in Asia, without revealing that they were in fact destined for the Chinese government, the Department of Justice said. (PTI)

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