This was first posted in Asia Times.
On the Friday before the
Memorial Day Weekend, the Committee of 100 (C100) published their findings on
the systemic profiling of Chinese Americans as economic espionage spies by the
US federal government.
The Chinese American
community, have always known that they are victims of institutionalized racism.
This study puts a measuring dipstick into this controversial issue.
Andrew Kim, recent Cum Laude
graduate of Harvard Law School, performed the actual analysis of public arrest
records of cases charged under the Economic Espionage Act (EEA) from 1997 to
2015.
Kim found that under the
Obama Administration, i.e., since 2009, the percentage of people charged under
EEA that were Chinese Americans tripled to make up 52% of all the cases. If all non-Chinese but of Asian descent were
included, the total would add up to 62% of all the cases.
Since ethnic Asians represent
only between 5-6% of the total US population, it would seem that Asian
Americans and particularly Chinese Americans are extraordinarily busy spying on
America.
However, Chinese or Asians
charged under EEA are also twice as likely as those with western surnames to
have the charges dropped or reduced to minor offenses so as to justify release
on probation.
Conversely, if convicted of
espionage, the average sentence in prison is 25 months for Chinese Americans as
compared to 11 months for those with western surnames.
In summary, if you are a
Chinese American living in the US, you are more likely to be suspected of being
a spy, more likely to be falsely accused, and more likely to pay dearly no
matter whether you are guilty of any real infractions. Just having the FBI
imagined wrongdoing is enough to put you through hell.
Frank Wu, Chairman of C100,
recruited Kim to do the study. Kim’s work did not start from scratch but was
built on top of the data already collected by C100 member Jeremy Wu.
Wu in turn initially took notice of the disparity based on ethnicity from the works of a
Palo Alto law firm.
C100, a national organization
of prominent Chinese Americans has been following closely cases when Chinese Americans
were arrested. When Los Alamos scientist Wen Ho Lee was arrested and put in
solitary confinement in 1999, the C100 had a leadership role in coming to his
defense.
Nelson Dong, then general
counsel of C100, via a series of conference calls, organized a national
coalition of Asian American organizations to present a unified voice of protest
to the Clinton Administration. Dr. Lee was not given due process and the group
protested that the FBI agent gave misleading and false testimony during Lee’s
trial.
Even though the presiding
judge apologize to Lee for government misconduct, Lee still had to plead guilty
to downloading data into his computer in violation of accepted national
laboratory procedure. The misdemeanor charge was necessary to justify his 10
months of solitary confinement. There was no other way for the government to
save face.
Eventually, the Lee family
got some monetary compensation from the media for violating Lee’s privacy
thanks to C100 member Brian Sun who acted as the plaintiff’s counsel. Getting
compensation from the government for wrongful prosecution is nearly impossible
as my review
disclosed as recently as two years ago.
There are currently two pending
cases involving Chinese American scientists seeking compensation from the
government. As reported last year, even after all charges were dropped against
her, Sherry Chen
still could not get her job back.
Chen had since then retained
legal counsel and got a hearing with the Merit System Protection Board of the
Federal Government that took place in Cincinnati in March. The purpose of the
hearing before the administrative judge of MSPB was to determine as to why Chen
should not get her job back.
At the hearing, it became
clear that Deborah Lee was the principal cause for denying Chen her old job.
Even after the charges against Chen were dropped, Lee wrote a two page letter
insisting that Chen was a danger to the US. Tom Adams, one time colleague of
Lee and Chen, told Chen’s supporters at the hearing that on a social occasion,
he had heard Lee expressed hatred and prejudice against ethnic Chinese.
Lee’s letter apparently
became the basis for Laura Furgione to draft the letter to dismiss Chen in her
capacity as the deputy director of National Weather Service. Furgione, a self-described
ambitious career bureaucrat, had to submit her removal letter twice because the
director of NWS refused to have anything to do with this sordid business.
Until her appearance at the
hearing in Cincinnati, Furgione has never met Chen, did not know her and had no
personal reason to insist on denying Chen her old post. Perhaps she thought
writing the proposal to dismiss Chen would be a boost for her career.
Since last December, Furgione
has moved from NWS to become chief of Office of Strategic Planning, a small
office with a handful of staff at the US Census Bureau. Wu who had retired from
the Bureau observed in LinkIn that
given the organizational disarray there and in face of a pending national
census, Furgione might be given assignments where she has no chance to succeed.
Professor Xiaoxing Xi
attended the C100 conference in Washington and I interviewed him about the
civil suit he filed against FBI agent Andrew Haugen. He said the decision to
sue Haugen was a very difficult one because the action required having to
relive the trauma of being taken away in handcuffs at gunpoint in front of his
family.
However, he was infuriated
not just by the way he was treated and that his right as an American citizen
has been violated, but because he has never been given any explanation from the
government as to why he was the target.
Xi hopes his legal action will give him some answers. He understands and expects that the due process will take a long time and that the system protects government wrongdoing.
The
way the system works in the US, even when an officer shoots an unarmed black
man in the back, the officer may still find a justifiable probable cause to
wiggle away. So it is with Haugen. Even if Haugen has a proclivity to arrest
Chinese on sight on trumped up charges, he can hide behind his badge of
authority and never face charges for hate crimes.
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