A Chinese-born scientist pleaded guilty on Tuesday to stealing valuable trade secrets about pesticides and food products from two major US companies and sending the information to China and Germany.
Kexue Huang, 46, worked at a Dow Chemical Co subsidiary from 2003 to 2008 in Indiana, where he led a team of scientists developing organic insecticides and then later for another agribusiness giant, privately held Cargill Inc.
He pleaded guilty in a federal court in Indiana to one count of stealing trade secrets from Cargill and one count of engaging in economic espionage at Dow, only the eighth case charged involving the US Economic Espionage Act of 1996.
The plea is the latest in a series of cases involving the theft of valuable trade secrets from US corporations that have been either taken or sent to China, where companies are in hot competition with US firms.
Huang admitted that despite signing a confidentiality agreement, he passed numerous secrets about Dow’s products to others doing research in Germany and China, according to his plea agreement filed in federal court in Indiana.
He also received grant money from the Chinese government to further his own research at a government-backed university, Hunan Normal University, as well as published articles about his work based on information from Dow, the agreement said.
He admitted he was trying to develop and produce the pesticides in China to compete against his former employer Dow, including identifying manufacturing facilities, according to the plea agreement filed in federal court.
After leaving Dow to work for Cargill, Huang also admitted he stole details about a key enzyme used to make a new food product at that company, prosecutors said.
He sent that sensitive information to a student at the Chinese government-backed university, they said. A Cargill representative was not immediately available for comment.
Huang was born in China and had legal permanent resident status in the US. He faces up to 15 years in prison for the economic espionage charge and 10 years for theft of trade secrets. He could also be deported.
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