Chinese National Charged with Destroying Hard Drive During FBI Investigation into the Possible Transfer of Sensitive Software to China

The UCLA researcher was allegedly seen throwing a damaged hard drive into a dumpster. Photo: Shutterstock

The UCLA researcher was allegedly seen throwing a damaged hard drive into a dumpster. Photo: Shutterstock

An FBI agent alleged that Guan Lei, a researcher at UCLA, destroyed and tried to discard a hard drive

Chinese National Charged with Destroying Hard Drive During FBI Investigation into the Possible Transfer of Sensitive Software to China

A Chinese national and researcher at the University of California, Los Angeles

has been arrested on federal charges of destroying evidence to obstruct an FBI investigation

after he was observed throwing a damaged hard drive into a dumpster outside his apartment, the Justice Department announced today.

Guan Lei, 29, of Alhambra,
was arrested pursuant to a one-count criminal complaint unsealed this afternoon during his initial appearance in United States District Court.

The criminal complaint alleges
that Guan, who was in the U.S. on a J-1 non-immigrant visa, threw a damaged hard drive into a trash dumpster near his residence on July 25.

The FBI
recovered the damaged hard drive after Guan was not allowed to board a flight to China and after Guan refused the FBI’s request to examine his computer.

The affidavit in support of the complaint notes

that the internal hard drive “was irreparably damaged and that all previous data associated with the hard drive appears to have been removed deliberately and by force.”

According to the complaint, Guan
is being investigated for possibly transferring sensitive U.S. software or technical data to China’s National University of Defense Technology (NUDT)

and falsely denying his association with the Chinese military – the People’s Liberation Army – in connection with his 2018 visa application and in interviews with federal law enforcement.

Guan later admitted
that he had participated in military training and wore military uniforms while at NUDT.

One of Guan’s NUDT faculty advisors in China was also a lieutenant general in the PLA who developed computers used by the PLA General Staff Department, the PLA General Armament Department, Air Force, military weather forecasts, and nuclear technology.

NUDT is “suspected of procuring U.S.-origin items to develop supercomputers with nuclear explosive applications” and has been placed on the Department of Commerce’s Entity List for nuclear nonproliferation reasons, according to the affidavit.

In addition to destroying the hard drive, the complaint alleges

that Guan concealed digital storage devices from investigators and falsely told federal officials that he had not had any contact with the Chinese consulate during his nearly two-year stay in the U.S.

OPA | Department of Justice

https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/chinese-national-charged-destroying-hard-drive-during-fbi-investigation-possible-transfer

Chinese researcher at UCLA arrested over China links – RTHK
https://news.rthk.hk/rthk/en/component/k2/1546638-20200829.htm