Chinese Spy Meng sentenced to 24 months

The Associated Press - June 18, 2008

Judge: "Meng's crime hurt United States national security"

J4JP Prefacing Comment

In yet another almost predictable slap in the face to the American Jewish Community and to Israel, yet another Chinese spy has been sentenced to a ridiculously light sentence relative to the seriousness of the espionage he committed, and particularly when compared to the

life sentence

that Jonathan Pollard is serving.

In addition to a 24 month sentence, Meng was fined $10,000 because he benefited financially from his espionage activities. Jonathan Pollard, on the other hand, who did not benefit financially from his espionage activities, was never fined. Moreover, Pollard unlike Meng, was also never formally accused, indicted, or convicted of harming the United States.

With the change in sentencing guidelines since Jonathan Pollard was sentenced, today Pollard would be facing a maximum 10 year sentence. Meng was facing a maximum of 25 years.

Would someone like to tell us why Pollard is serving his 23rd year of an unlimited life sentence, while Meng gets 24 months?

* * *

SAN JOSE, Calif. - An engineer who admitted he tried to sell fighter-pilot training software to the Chinese Navy was sentenced Wednesday to 24 months in federal prison, in the first sentencing for a newly defined intellectual property crime.

Xiaodong Sheldon Meng, 44, was sentenced on the rare charge of committing economic espionage against the U.S. It's the most serious crime under the Economic Espionage Act of 1996 and involves stealing trade secrets to benefit a foreign government.

Only five cases have been filed under the law, three of them in Silicon Valley, which authorities say is fertile ground for trade secret thieves looking to make a quick buck or bolster the technological and military development of foreign nations.

Meng didn't speak during the half-hour hearing in U.S. District Court in San Jose. He stood with his hands clasped and head down as Judge Jeremy Fogel handed down a sentence in line with the U.S. Attorney's Office recommended punishment and Meng's plea agreement.

Fogel commended Meng's attempts to turn around his life following his arrest in 2004 but said Meng's crime hurt United States national security and deserved prison time.

"This is a case where the court has to be merciful but it has to be very firm," Fogel said.

Could have gotten 25 years


Meng had faced a maximum sentence of 25 years in prison after pleading guilty to two felony counts: economic espionage and exporting controlled military technologies. Because of his lack of a criminal record before this case, prosecutors agreed to seek a far shorter sentence.

Outside court, Assistant U.S. Attorney Mark Krotoski said it was Meng's focus on profits, not a foreign allegiance, that drove him to steal the trade secrets and to try to sell them to the highest bidder. As such, Meng's crime shouldn't be punished as harshly as someone convicted of spying on the U.S., he said.

Meng is a Chinese national with Canadian citizenship who lives in Cupertino, about 45 miles south of San Francisco.

"People have this image of a spy, but you can cause a lot of harm without being a spy - you can damage national security," Krotoski said in an interview.

Meng's defense lawyer, Manuel Araujo, said he believed the punishment for his client was still too severe. He described Meng's actions as "stupid" but said his client has undergone a "profound metamorphosis."

"For him as an individual it was too harsh," Araujo said. "He's a good man who got caught up in the fast and loose trading of trade secrets. The sentence might open the eyes of people who don't realize the consequences of these actions."

Investigators say Meng went around giving sales pitches to Asian military officials for software stolen from his former employer, San Jose-based Quantum3D Inc.

No word on whether sale made


He was indicted in December 2006 on 36 felony counts alleging he attempted to sell the purloined programs to the Royal Thai Air Force, the Royal Malaysian Air Force and the Navy Research Center in China.

Authorities have declined to say whether any of the secrets were successfully sold. Krotoski said officials in China apparently didn't know Meng was trying to sell them stolen trade secrets - just that they were dealing with a program of high value to the U.S.

In addition to serving the prison sentence, Meng is to pay a $10,000 fine.

Meng left the courthouse without commenting to reporters.