BOSTON—A Chinese national in
Massachusetts on business was arrested for illegally supplying U.S. origin
parts to end-users in China in violation of U.S. export laws.
Qiang Hu, a/k/a Johnson Hu, 47, was
charged in a complaint with conspiracy to violate the Export Administration
Regulations and the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. The complaint,
originally filed on May 18, was unsealed after Hu’s arrest at his hotel in
North Andover yesterday.
The complaint alleges that Hu has been
the sales manager at MKS Instruments Shanghai Ltd. (MKS-Shanghai) since 2008.
MKS-Shanghai is the Shanghai sales office of MKS Instruments Inc. (MKS), which
is headquartered in Andover. Hu’s employment gave him access to
MKS-manufactured parts, including export-controlled pressure-measuring sensors
(manometer types 622B, 623B, 626A, 626B, 627B, 722A, and 722B), which are
commonly known as pressure transducers. Pressure transducers are export
controlled because they are used in gas centrifuges to enrich uranium and
produce weapons-grade uranium.
The complaint alleges that beginning in
2007, Hu and others caused thousands of MKS pressure transducers worth millions
of dollars to be exported from the United States and delivered to unauthorized
end-users using export licenses that were fraudulently obtained from the U.S.
Department of Commerce. The complaint alleges that Hu and his co-conspirators
used two primary means of deception to export the pressure transducers. First,
the conspirators used licenses issued to legitimate MKS business customers to
export the pressure transducers to China and then caused the parts to be
delivered to other end-users who were not themselves named on the export
licenses or authorized to receive the parts. Second, the conspirators obtained
export licenses in the name of a front company and then used these fraudulently
obtained licenses to export the parts to China, where they were delivered to
the actual end-users.
MKS is not a target of the government’s
investigation into these matters.
Hu remains in custody and is scheduled
for a detention hearing on May 31 at 11 a.m. If convicted, he faces a maximum
sentence of 20 years in federal prison, to be followed by up to three years of
supervised release, and a $1 million fine.
United States Attorney Carmen M. Ortiz;
Richard DesLauriers, Special Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, Boston Field Office; Bruce M. Foucart, Special Agent in Charge
of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Office of Homeland Security
Investigations in Boston; and John J. McKenna, Special Agent in Charge of the
U.S. Department of Commerce, Office of Export Enforcement, Boston Field Office
made the announcement today. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S.
Attorneys William D. Weinreb and B. Stephanie Siegmann in Ortiz’s Antiterrorism
and National Security Unit.
The details contained in the complaint
are allegations. The defendant is presumed to be innocent unless and until
proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.
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