US tour guide charged with spying for China
A US citizen working as a tour guide has been charged with spying for Chinese intelligence services, the US Department of Justice said.
Xuehua Peng delivered classified information to China’s Ministry of State Security (MSS), prosecutors said.
Mr Peng, 56, allegedly completed five “dead drops” at hotel rooms between 2015 and 2018.
He was arrested on Friday in Hayward, California, and denied bail at a court hearing.
“The conduct charged in this case alleges a combination of age-old spy-craft and modern technology,” US Attorney David Anderson said.
The FBI snared Mr Peng, also known as “Edward Peng”, as part of an elaborate “double agent operation” launched in March 2015.
A “confidential human source” – an FBI double agent – passed national security secrets to Mr Peng in return for payment, prosecutors said.
On six separate occasions, Mr Peng allegedly showed up at hotel rooms in California and Georgia to collect or drop off packages.
In four of those cases, Mr Peng allegedly retrieved an SD card containing classified information, before travelling to Beijing to meet Chinese intelligence officers.
Covert FBI footage, released by the US Department of Justice, shows Mr Peng conducting some of the dead drops, prosecutors said. Dead drops are used by spies to pass information or items in secret locations.
Mr Peng’s arrest “exposes and disrupts an operation by those Chinese intelligence officers to collect such information without having to step foot in this country”, Assistant Attorney General of National Security John Demers said.
A resident of Hayward in San Francisco’s Bay Area, Mr Peng arrived in the US on a temporary business visa. He became a permanent resident in February 2006, following his marriage to his then wife, and was naturalised as a US citizen in September 2012.
Trained in traditional Chinese medicine, Mr Peng is believed to have been working as a sightseeing tour operator in the San Francisco area for Chinese students and visitors.
Mr Peng is expected to appear in court for a detention hearing in San Francisco on Wednesday. If convicted of the charges, he faces a maximum sentence of 10 years, and a fine of $250,000 (£203,000).
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