A former CIA case officer was on Friday sentenced by a federal judge in Virginia to serve 19 years in prison, after he pleaded guilty in May to conspiring to become a spy for China, federal prosecutors announced.
Jerry Chun Shing Lee (李春興), 55, left the CIA in 2007 and moved to Hong Kong.
In 2010, he was approached by two Chinese intelligence officers who offered to pay him US$100,000 and to take care of him “for life” for information he had acquired as a CIA officer.
Hundreds of thousands of US dollars were subsequently paid into Lee’s personal bank account between 2010 and 2013 in exchange for his services.
“Instead of embracing that responsibility and honoring his commitment to not disclose national defense information, Lee sold out his country, conspired to become a spy for a foreign government, and then repeatedly lied to investigators about his conduct,” US Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia Zachary Terwilliger said in a statement.
According to the US Department of Justice, the FBI conducted a search of Lee’s hotel room in Hawaii in August 2012 and discovered he had an address book and day planner containing handwritten notes he had made during his time as a CIA case officer prior to 2004.
The notes included highly sensitive intelligence, such as the names of CIA assets, operational meeting locations, telephone numbers and details on covert facilities.
He later lied to the FBI when he was confronted.
He pleaded guilty in May with conspiring to deliver national security defense information to aid a foreign government.
In May, another former CIA case officer, Kevin Mallory, was sentenced to 20 years in prison after being convicted on charges of conspiring to transmit US defense secrets to China.
In September, a former US Defense Intelligence Agency officer, Ron Rockwell Hansen, was sentenced to 10 years for attempting to transmit classified information to China.
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