Welcome, Guest! - Register - Login, Online: 174
Moldova.org / Politicom EnglishEnglish | RomanianRomanian | RussianRussian  




Virgo
23 August - 22 September


You need to take care of family issues today, even if you thought they were behind you. Things keep popping up, though -- that's just the way it is. You're happy to deal this time, though.




—— Today —— —— Tomorow ——
 
Chisinau 10 days
Hi: 33 ˚C
Low: 18 ˚C
Hi: 26 ˚C
Low: 13 ˚C
 
Bucharest 10 days
Hi: 33 ˚C
Low: 19 ˚C
Hi: 29 ˚C
Low: 16 ˚C
 
Moscow 10 days
Hi: 25 ˚C
Low: 16 ˚C
Hi: 12 ˚C
Low: 6 ˚C
 
Kyev 10 days
Hi: 32 ˚C
Low: 18 ˚C
Hi: 20 ˚C
Low: 11 ˚C

New Orleans man spied for China

A federal judge in Arlington, Va., Friday sentenced a New Orleans man to more than 15 years in prison for spying for China.

U.S. District Judge Leonie M. Brinkema also ordered Tai Shen Kuo, 58, to forfeit $40,000 for conspiracy to deliver national defense information to China. Kuo pleaded guilty May 13.

Kuo, a naturalized citizen, began spying for China in March 2007. He obtained national defense information from Gregg W. Bergersen -- a weapons systems policy analyst at the Defense Security Cooperation Agency, an agency within the Department of Defense in Arlington. The information mostly involved U.S. military sales to Taiwan and U.S. military communications security classified as secret.

Kuo gave Bergersen gifts, cash payments, dinners and trips to such places as Las Vegas.

Kuo also led Bergersen to believe that he would make Bergersen a part owner or an employee of a company selling U.S. defense technology to Taiwan after Bergersen's retirement from government service, the Justice Department said in a release.

Bergersen was sentenced July 11 to 57 months in prison and three years supervised release.

Co-conspirator Yu Xin Kang was sentenced Aug. 1 to 18 months in prison for aiding and abetting an unregistered agent of a foreign government.

Copyright 2008 by United Press International


Publication date: 08 August 2008   

Source: UPI-1-20080808-14564500-bc-us-chinaspy.xml

Archive


Bookmark this news
AddThis Social Bookmark Button

ADs



Latest news

Claim: Firefighters trust failed families
A charity set up to help families of New York firefighters killed Sept. 11, 2001, gave only $4.4 million of $11 million it collected, tax filings show.Firefighters National Trust, founded by Stephen Careaga, a onetime volunteer firefighter and reserve police officer from Gig Harbor, Wash., promised more...

08.09.2008 - 37 killed in Philippine landslides
08.09.2008 - Gallup Poll: McCain moves ahead of Obama
08.09.2008 - A-bomb survivors tour world for peace
08.09.2008 - Seoul doubts Kim Jong-Il illness report
08.09.2008 - UPI NewsTrack TopNews
08.09.2008 - Ike kills dozens in Haiti, heads for Cuba
08.09.2008 - Hurricane Ike heads for Cuba
08.09.2008 - Rice urges Morocco, Algeria to talk
08.09.2008 - White powder sent to U.S. Embassy




What is New?


© 1997-2008 moldova.org - All rights reserved. moldova.org is a registered mark by Moldova Foundation.
Privacy Policy. Please read the terms of use when you can benefit from our services. Design and programming by Adpixel.biz