Lim Yong Nam, aka Steven Lim, 43, a citizen of Singapore,
was sentenced today to 40 months in prison for his role in a conspiracy that
caused thousands of radio frequency modules to be illegally exported from the
U.S. to Iran, at least 14 of which were later found in unexploded improvised
explosive devices (IEDs) in Iraq.
The announcement was made by Acting Assistant Attorney
General for National Security Mary B. McCord, U.S. Attorney Channing D.
Phillips of the District of Columbia, Acting Assistant Secretary of Export
Enforcement Richard Majauskas for the U.S. Department of Commerce, Acting
Director Thomas D. Homan of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and
Assistant Director Bill Priestap of the FBI’s Counterintelligence Division. The
sentence was issued by the Honorable Emmet G. Sullivan.
Lim was extradited in 2016 from Indonesia, where he had been
detained since October 2014 in connection with the U.S. request for
extradition. He pleaded guilty on Dec. 15, 2016, to a charge of conspiracy to
defraud the U.S. by dishonest means. Lim will be deported upon completion of
his sentence.
Lim and others were indicted in the District of Columbia in
June of 2010 on charges involving the shipment of radio frequency modules made
by a Minnesota-based company. The modules have several commercial applications,
including in wireless local area networks connecting printers and computers in
office settings. These modules include encryption capabilities and have a range
allowing them to transmit data wirelessly as far as 40 miles when configured
with a high-gain antenna. These same modules also have potentially lethal
applications. Notably, during 2008 and 2009, coalition forces in Iraq recovered
numerous modules made by the Minnesota firm that had been utilized as part of
the remote detonation system for IEDs. According to the plea documents filed in
the case, between 2001 and 2007, IEDs were the major source of American combat
casualties in Iraq.
In a statement of offense submitted at the time of the
guilty plea, Lim admitted that between August 2007 and February 2008, he and
others caused 6,000 modules to be purchased and illegally exported from the
Minnesota-based company through Singapore, and later to Iran, in five
shipments, knowing that the export of U.S.-origin goods to Iran was a violation
of U.S. law. In each transaction, Lim
and others made misrepresentations and false statements to the Minnesota firm
that Singapore was the final destination of the goods; at no point in the
series of transactions did Lim or any of his co-conspirators inform the company
that the modules were destined for Iran.
Similarly, according to the statement of offense, Lim and others caused
false documents to be filed with the U.S. government, in which they claimed
that Singapore was the ultimate destination of the modules. Lim and his
co-conspirators were directly aware of the restrictions on sending U.S.-origin
goods to Iran.
Shortly after the modules arrived in Singapore, they were
kept in storage at a freight forwarding company until being aggregated with
other electronic components and shipped to Iran. There is no indication that
Lim or any of his co-conspirators ever took physical possession of these
modules before they reached Iran or that they were incorporated into another
product before being re-exported to Iran.
According to the statement of offense, 14 of the 6,000 modules
the defendants routed from Minnesota to Iran were later recovered in Iraq,
where the modules were being used as part of IED remote detonation systems.
This investigation was jointly conducted by ICE Homeland
Security Investigations (HSI) special agents in Boston and Los Angeles; FBI
agents in Minneapolis; and Department of Commerce, Bureau of Industry and
Security agents in Chicago and Boston. Substantial assistance was provided by
the U.S. Department of Defense, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the State
Department’s Directorate of Defense Trade Controls, the Treasury Department’s
Office of Foreign Assets Control, and the Office of International Affairs in
the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, particularly the Justice Department
Attaché in the Philippines, as well as the FBI and HSI Attachés in Singapore
and Jakarta.
U.S. law enforcement authorities thanked the governments of
Singapore and Indonesia for the substantial assistance that was provided in the
investigation of this matter.
The prosecution was handled by Assistant U.S. Attorney Ari
Redbord of the District of Columbia and Trial Attorney Julie Edelstein of the
National Security Division’s Counterintelligence and Export Control Section.
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