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posted by martyb on Tuesday February 05 2019, @10:09AM   Printer-friendly
from the failure-to-communicate dept.

FBI reportedly carried out a sting operation on Huawei at a burger joint - While a Bloomberg reporter watched from a nearby gelato stand.

The makers of a super-hard smartphone glass made partially of synthetic diamonds took part in an FBI sting on Huawei, according to a new Bloomberg report. The operation apparently took place at a Prime Burger joint in Vegas during CES last month, while a Businessweek reporter watched from a nearby gelato stand. The embattled Chinese company had ordered samples of the "Miraj Diamond Glass" from US startup Akhan Semiconductor in 2017, only to return them badly damaged. Suspecting Huawei of intellectual property theft, Akhan's founder Adam Khan reportedly contacted the FBI, which drafted him and COO Carl Shurboff to take part in its Huawei investigations.

Email and text communications between the startup and a Huawei engineer were reportedly forwarded to the agency as part of the inquiry. A phone call between Khan, Shurboff and the same Huawei representative was also allegedly tapped on December 10th. Then came the Vegas sting, with the same Huawei staffer in attendance along with her colleague, Jennifer Lo, a senior official with the company in Santa Clara, California. Unbeknown to them, Khan and Shurboff were allegedly taping the entire get-together.

Throughout the meeting, the Huawei reps denied that it had violated US export laws, including provisions of the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR), which control the export of materials with defense applications -- diamond being one of those materials. They also "claimed ignorance" when it came to the damaged samples.

The FBI also raided a Huawei lab in San Diego. This particular investigation has not resulted in any charges yet.

Also at CNBC.

Related: Arrest of Huawei Executive Causing Discontent Among Chinese Elites
China Arrests Former Canadian Diplomat; Chinese Companies Ban iPhones, Require Huawei Phones
Huawei Under Investigation by DoJ for Theft of T-Mobile Trade Secrets


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 06 2019, @05:02AM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 06 2019, @05:02AM (#797065)

    My point is that if a reporter gets tipped off about the Prime Burger sting, and gets spoon-fed a story, that is not "sunshine", but rather propaganda.

    And the last time the media helped bang the drums against an adversary, we got the disasterous Iraq War. Were those WMD stories sunshine, too?

  • (Score: 3, Touché) by NotSanguine on Wednesday February 06 2019, @07:00AM

    by NotSanguine (285) <{NotSanguine} {at} {SoylentNews.Org}> on Wednesday February 06 2019, @07:00AM (#797086) Homepage Journal

    My point is that if a reporter gets tipped off about the Prime Burger sting, and gets spoon-fed a story, that is not "sunshine", but rather propaganda.

    And the last time the media helped bang the drums against an adversary, we got the disasterous Iraq War. Were those WMD stories sunshine, too?

    Telling specific and verifiable lies to journalists on deep background is very different from what was, essentially, a ride along.

    You're comparing apples to oranges. But you know that.

    You're not really very good at this. But I have faith in you, son. Keep working on it. You'll improve.

    --
    No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr