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16 Jul 2010, 11:19 am
[JURIST] The lawyer for US geologist Xue Feng [advocacy website] announced Friday that Xue has appealed his conviction for selling state secrets, arguing that the information to which he had access did not include protected information. [read post]
5 Jul 2010, 9:18 am
[JURIST] Beijing's No. 1 Intermediate People's Court Monday sentenced US geologist Xue Feng [advocacy website] to eight years in prison for collecting intelligence and illegally providing state secrets. [read post]
6 Jul 2010, 5:48 pm by Dan
Was Xue Feng aware of the nature of these documents prior to obtaining them? [read post]
18 Feb 2011, 8:33 am
[JURIST] A Chinese appeals court on Friday upheld the conviction of US geologist Xue Feng [advocacy website], sentenced to eight years in prison for committing industrial espionage. [read post]
20 Jan 2020, 6:54 pm
Contents include:Unpacking the Strategic Dynamics of the Indo-PacificKai He & Mingjiang Li, Understanding the dynamics of the Indo-Pacific: US–China strategic competition, regional actors, and beyond Feng Liu, The recalibration of Chinese assertiveness: China's responses to the Indo-Pacific challenge Xue Gong, Non-traditional security cooperation between China and south-east Asia: implications for Indo-Pacific geopolitics Kei Koga, Japan's… [read post]
11 Jul 2010, 1:15 pm by Robin Mashal
Xue Feng, a Chinese-born U.S. citizen, had been working in China for IHS Energy, an American consultancy. [read post]
17 Dec 2009, 6:43 am
In recent months, Australian national Stern Hu — an executive with the global mining giant Rio Tinto involved in big-money and politically touchy iron ore negotiations — was detained on state secrets charges that were later reduced to infringing trade secrets.Another China-born, naturalized American, geologist Feng Xue, disappeared into custody two years ago and has been put on trial for passing on state secrets — for arranging the purchase of a detailed… [read post]
31 Dec 2010, 4:28 am by Dan
Perhaps Foster falls into use of such hyperbolic language because the judicial cases he looks at are the “bad” ones, like that of Zhao Lianhai or perhaps Xue Feng, a US geologist sentenced to 8 years on a state secrets charge. [read post]