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US professor Franklin Tao avoids prison in blow to Trump-era China-related investigation

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US professor Franklin Tao avoids prison in blow to Trump-era China-related investigation

  • Prosecutors had sought a jail term for the Kansas academic even after a judge threw out most of his trial conviction for concealing work he did in China
  • Tao was among about 2 dozen academics charged as part of the now-defunct ‘China Initiative’, aimed at countering economic espionage and research theft

Reuters
Published: 4:23am, 19 Jan, 2023
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Feng “Franklin” Tao, a professor at the University of Kansas, appears in an undated photo provided by the school. Photo: University of Kansas via Reuters

A University of Kansas professor avoided prison on Wednesday for making a false statement related to work he was doing in China in the latest setback for a Trump-era US Department of Justice crackdown on Chinese influence within American academia.

Prosecutors had asked US District Judge Julie Robinson in Kansas City, Kansas, to sentence Feng “Franklin” Tao to 2½ years in prison, even after the judge in September threw out most of his trial conviction for concealing work he did in China. :disagree:

Robinson instead sentenced the chemical engineering professor to time served with no fine or restitution. Peter Zeidenberg, his lawyer, in an email said Tao was “immensely relieved by the sentence”.

Tao, who was indicted in 2019, was among about two dozen academics who were charged as part of the “China Initiative”, which launched in 2018 during former Republican President Donald Trump’s era and aimed to counter suspected Chinese economic espionage and research theft.


Tao, 51, has denied wrongdoing, and Zeidenberg said he plans to appeal his conviction on the one remaining count in the case for failing to disclose his affiliation with a Chinese university on a form submitted to the University of Kansas.

The Justice Department did not respond to requests for comment.

The Justice Department under Democratic President Joe Biden in February 2022 ended the China Initiative following several failed prosecutions and criticism that it chilled research and fuelled bias against Asians, though it said it would continue pursuing cases over national security threats posed by China.

Prosecutors said Tao, who worked on renewable energy projects, concealed his affiliation with Fuzhou University in China from the University of Kansas and two federal agencies that provided grant funding for the professor’s research.

A jury in April convicted him of four of the eight counts against him.

But Robinson in September overturned three wire fraud convictions, citing a lack of evidence. :enjoy:


Flimsy evidences again and again.
 
US professor Franklin Tao avoids prison in blow to Trump-era China-related investigation

  • Prosecutors had sought a jail term for the Kansas academic even after a judge threw out most of his trial conviction for concealing work he did in China
  • Tao was among about 2 dozen academics charged as part of the now-defunct ‘China Initiative’, aimed at countering economic espionage and research theft

Reuters
Published: 4:23am, 19 Jan, 2023
View attachment 911955
Feng “Franklin” Tao, a professor at the University of Kansas, appears in an undated photo provided by the school. Photo: University of Kansas via Reuters

A University of Kansas professor avoided prison on Wednesday for making a false statement related to work he was doing in China in the latest setback for a Trump-era US Department of Justice crackdown on Chinese influence within American academia.

Prosecutors had asked US District Judge Julie Robinson in Kansas City, Kansas, to sentence Feng “Franklin” Tao to 2½ years in prison, even after the judge in September threw out most of his trial conviction for concealing work he did in China. :disagree:

Robinson instead sentenced the chemical engineering professor to time served with no fine or restitution. Peter Zeidenberg, his lawyer, in an email said Tao was “immensely relieved by the sentence”.

Tao, who was indicted in 2019, was among about two dozen academics who were charged as part of the “China Initiative”, which launched in 2018 during former Republican President Donald Trump’s era and aimed to counter suspected Chinese economic espionage and research theft.


Tao, 51, has denied wrongdoing, and Zeidenberg said he plans to appeal his conviction on the one remaining count in the case for failing to disclose his affiliation with a Chinese university on a form submitted to the University of Kansas.

The Justice Department did not respond to requests for comment.

The Justice Department under Democratic President Joe Biden in February 2022 ended the China Initiative following several failed prosecutions and criticism that it chilled research and fuelled bias against Asians, though it said it would continue pursuing cases over national security threats posed by China.

Prosecutors said Tao, who worked on renewable energy projects, concealed his affiliation with Fuzhou University in China from the University of Kansas and two federal agencies that provided grant funding for the professor’s research.

A jury in April convicted him of four of the eight counts against him.

But Robinson in September overturned three wire fraud convictions, citing a lack of evidence. :enjoy:


Flimsy evidences again and again.
They just want to convict him based on his race and not evidence. USA is a racist country. But this is good for China, it scare off many bright Chinese scientist who will return to China. :enjoy:
 
But Robinson in September overturned three wire fraud convictions, citing a lack of evidence. :enjoy:


Flimsy evidences again and again.

No, his lawyer said Tao admitted working for Fuzhou University...but said he was working "for free" and since he hadn't received any direct payment yet he couldn't technically be charged with "wire-fraud". The judge threw out the wire-fraud and denied his appeal on the other guilty charge of making false statements.
 
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I guess China could frame any American individual they want,by simply wire him/her some money
 

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