21.1.09

Demand a full investigation into U.S. detention and interrogation policies.
Support our 100 Days Campaign.
Donate to end the use of torture

Dear Kathy,

Today, we expect President Obama to announce a plan to close Guantánamo Bay prison. This is a major victory in restoring our values and rehabilitating America’s image worldwide. I want to personally thank you for being part of this fight with us.

However, you and I know that there is so much more that needs to be done — so many wrongs that still need to be righted.

Alex Gibney’s Academy Award-winning documentary Taxi to the Dark Side showed in stark terms
what you and I are fighting for. When I heard the stories of those tortured prisoners, it made me feel ashamed and angry, and made clear why we must demand accountability for all abuses committed in the “war on terror.”

With your financial support
, we can restore America’s commitment to justice and take our place, once again, as a human rights leader around the world.

Make a tax-deductible donation to our 100 Days Campaign and help us seize this unprecedented opportunity to make human rights a centerpiece of the new Obama administration.


In addition to closing Guantánamo Bay prison, in his first 100 days in office, we are calling on President Obama to end the use of torture and other inhuman treatment and fully investigate U.S. detention and interrogation policies, including holding accountable those responsible for torture.

Please watch this disturbing video
clip from Taxi to the Dark Side. Then, make a donation of $35, $75 or $100 — whatever you can afford — to help us end the use of torture and restore America’s reputation around the world.


Amnesty members like you have always remained vigilant in the protection of human rights. I am counting on your continued leadership and commitment as we demand a full investigation into all aspects of U.S. detention and interrogation policies and usher in a new era of respect for human rights around the world.

Your steadfast commitment has helped us reach today’s remarkable victory for human rights. Thank you for your continued support as we work together to restore the America we believe in.

Sincerely,
Larry Cox
Executive Director, Amnesty International

20.1.09

The Sea of Humanity





News Americas

World leaders congratulate Obama

Barack Obama's inauguration drew hundreds of thousands of people from across the US and the world to Capitol Hill [AFP]

Nelson Mandela, former South African president

"Your election to this high office has inspired people as few other events in recent times have done. Amongst many around the world a sense of hopelessness had set in as so many problems remain unresolved and seemingly incapable of being resolved.

"You, Mister President, have brought a new voice of hope that these problems can be addressed and that we can in fact change the world and make of it a better place.''

Gordon Brown, British prime minister

"He is a man of great vision, he is a man of great determination and energy and he is a man of great moral purpose. And I think all these qualities are ones that will stand him in great stead for facing up to the changes ahead of him."

Angela Merkel, German chancellor

"I believe today is a very special day not only for the United States of America but also a special day for billions of people all over the world. The fact that a black president is inaugurated and the fact that we are looking at an intensive trans-Atlantic co-operation is something that not only moves the heads and thoughts but also the hearts."

Silvio Berlusconi, Italian prime minister

"Many hopes and expectations have been piled on him, not just by the American people but also the rest of the world. The thing to do is to send him the most affectionate and cordial wishes so that he can fulfil these expectations."

Salam Fayyad, Palestinian prime minister

"We wish him well, and we look forward to active engagement on the part of his administration in cooperation with important members of the international community, notably, the European Union.

Ehud Olmert, Israeli prime minister

"The greatest democracy in the world has again proven that it is a beacon and example for many countries. The entire State of Israel rejoices with the United States and welcomes President Obama, who took the oath of office this evening.

"Barack Obama's journey to the White House has impressed and inspired the entire world. I am convinced that the United States' deep and abiding ties with Israel will strengthen further. The values of democracy, brotherhood and freedom that constitute the building blocks of American society are also shared by Israeli society, together with the faith in man's power and ability to change and influence his surroundings.

"We wish the incoming President success in his office and are certain that we will be full partners in advancing peace and stability in the Middle East."

Nicolas Sarkozy, French president

"With your election, the American people has vigorously expressed its confidence in progress and in the future, as well as its resolve to have an open, new, strong and caring America that you embody.

"As you are entering office, I should like to convey to you, on my behalf and on the behalf of the people of France, my very best wishes for great success at the head of the American nation."

Hugo Chavez, Venezuelan president

"Today is a day which has particular importance internationally because a new President of the United States takes office but nobody should raise their hopes.

"We are still talking about the American empire and as our colleague Brazil's president Lula [Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva] said a few days ago, hopefully Obama [will] look towards Latin America in a new way with a new focus with regards to democracy and change processes."

Mwai Kibaki, Kenyan president

"On behalf of the government and the people of Kenya and on my own behalf, I extend our message of best wishes on the auspicious occasion of your inauguration as the 44th president of the United States of America."

Kevin Rudd, Australian prime minister

"I believe from everything I have seen, read and heard and from the conversations that I have had with him that the American people have chosen well in their new president."

Source: Al Jazeera and agencies






AMERICAS News








19.1.09

Collectively We- the Majority of USA and the World say Amen

Inaugural Committee Dear Friend,

Today, Americans in all 50 states answered President-elect Obama's call to service.

Thousands of people stood up to renew America together, doing everything from working in homeless shelters and mentoring young people, to assembling more than 80,000 care packages for our troops at a service event here in Washington, D.C.

Thank you for a great day of service.

Tomorrow, Barack Obama and Joe Biden will be sworn-in as President and Vice President of the United States.

You can watch the Swearing-In ceremony live on our website beginning at 11:00 a.m.

http://www.pic2009.org/live


In the evening, we will be throwing the first-ever Neighborhood Ball, a nationwide celebration of change -- and you don't have to be in the nation's capital to join in the festivities.

ABC will broadcast the Washington, D.C. Neighborhood Ball beginning at 8:00 p.m. EST, and people at Neighborhood Balls across the country will be sending in photos and videos of their celebrations. Some may even be featured in the official Inaugural book.

I encourage you to share your own photos and stories:

http://www.pic2009.org/celebrate


You can also text OBAMA to 56333 for instructions on how to send in congratulation messages and pictures from your mobile phone.

This inauguration is more than just the beginning of a new administration. It is the beginning of a nationwide spirit of unity and service.

I hope you will stay involved in the effort to renew America together.

Thank you,

Emmett

Emmett S. Beliveau
Executive Director
Presidential Inaugural Committee

16.1.09

Yes, He's the Man- fly me ANYDAY, and Teach others to do the same!

(CNN) -- Passengers on the US Airways flight that crash-landed into the Hudson River Thursday afternoon praised the actions and courage of the pilot, a safety consultant with 40 years of experience in the aviation industry.

Chesley B. "Sully" Sullenberger, a former Air Force fighter pilot, has been with US Airways since 1980.

Chesley B. "Sully" Sullenberger, a former Air Force fighter pilot, has been with US Airways since 1980.

Sources tell CNN that Chesley B. "Sully" Sullenberger was piloting US Airways flight 1549 from New York's LaGuardia airport to Charlotte, North Carolina, when at least one of the plane's engines failed.

Passenger Jeff Kolodjay offered "kudos" to Sullenberger for a landing that minimized damage to the aircraft and its 155 passengers and crew.

"All of a sudden the captain came on and he told us to brace ourselves and probably brace ourselves pretty hard. But he did an amazing job -- kudos to him on that landing," said Kolodjay, who was sitting in seat 22A.

Sullenberger's wife told CNN that she was stunned to hear the news from her husband after it was all over.

"I hadn't been watching the news. I've heard Sully say to people, 'It's rare for an airline pilot to have an incident in their career,' " said Lori Sullenberger of Danville, California.

"When he called me he said, 'There's been an accident.' At first I thought it was something minor, but then he told me the circumstances and my body started shaking and I rushed to get our daughters out of school."

US Airways said all 155 passengers and crew are alive and safely off the plane.

The crash-landing has also earned the former fighter pilot and private safety consultant accolades from state and government officials.

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg commended the pilot for not leaving the plane without checking to make sure every passenger had been evacuated.

"It would appear that the pilot did a masterful job of landing the plane in the river and then making sure that everybody got out," Bloomberg said at a press conference Thursday.

"I had a long conversation with the pilot. He walked the plane twice after everybody else was off and tried to verify that there was nobody else on board -- and assures us there was not."

Sullenberger apparently was forced to make an emergency landing after geese were sucked into one or both of the jet's engines. An eyewitness working on the west side of Manhattan said the belly of the plane touched the water first.

An official who heard tape recordings of the radio traffic from Flight 1549 reported the pilot was extraordinarily calm during the event.

"There was no panic, no hysterics," the official said. "It was professional, it was calm, it was methodical. It was everything you hoped it could be."

The pilot and air traffic controller discussed options, including landing at Teterboro airport in New Jersey, the official said. Then there was a "period of time where there was no communications back, and I'm assuming he was concentrating on more important things."

Sullenberger's background in aviation appeared to have prepared him for such a situation.

He has been a pilot with US Airways since 1980, following seven years in the U.S. Air Force.

His resume -- posted on the Web site for his safety consulting firm, Safety Reliability Methods, Inc. -- lists piloting procedures, technical safety strategies, emergency management and operations improvement, as areas of industry expertise.

He served as an instructor and Air Line Pilots Association safety chairman, accident investigator and national technical committee member, according to a biography on the site. He participated in several USAF and National Transportation Safety Board accident investigations, and worked with NASA scientists on a paper on error and aviation, his site says.

For the passengers on flight 1549, Sullenberger's skill and expertise were apparent. iReport.com: Did you see the crash-landing? Send images

"I've flown in a lot of planes and that was a phenomenal landing," said passenger Fred Berretta said.

Berretta was sitting in seat 16A right over one of the engines when it failed and the pilot turned the plane to align it with the Hudson River. He described silence in the plane as the passengers waited to hear from the crew.

A few moments later, the direction to brace for landing came.

"It was an amazing piece of airmanship," said Peter Goelz, a former NTSB managing director.

NEW YORK (CNN) -- The pilot aboard U.S. Airways Flight 1549 came over the speaker system and told passengers "brace for impact." One passenger turned on his cell phone so his body could be found with its GPS tracking. Others reflected on their lives.

iReporter Julie Pukelis used a camera and a telescope to get this view of the crash scene on the Hudson River.
Unbelievable

iReporter Julie Pukelis used a camera and a telescope to get this view of the crash scene on the Hudson River.

Survivors said it was about 20 seconds later when the plane struck the water of the Hudson River on Thursday afternoon.

Each of them lauded the heroics of the pilot, Chesley B. "Sully" Sullenberger III.

Here are survivor accounts in their own words: Video Watch message to pilot: "I'll buy you a beer" »

Vince Spera
"He's the man! He's absolutely the man. ... If you want to talk to a hero, get ahold of him because that is the hero in this whole deal."

Spera descibed "the moment of impact": "Have you ever been in a speedboat and hit some wake? That's what it felt like, when you go over the wake and you hit the water again. ... It wasn't that bad of an impact, which was strange. And then after that, there wasn't a lot of yelling and screaming. It was fairly orderly getting off the plane."

Andrew Jamison
"God was certainly looking out for all of us." Video Watch one decribe how "the engine blew" »

Brad Wentzell
Wentzell cried when talking about returning home to snuggle with his young daughter. "When I get home, I am going to take my nose and put it by her ear, her little warm body and give her a nice kiss from Daddy. I'm alive. That's it. I don't have much else to say."

"We have a second chance in life." Photo See photos of the "Miracle on the Hudson" »

Carl Bazariane
"We were all looking to see how we were gonna die. It was really strange."

On the crash landing, he said, "Usually in moments like that, you would expect chaos. It got really quiet and nobody said a word. There was a child crying. That was about it. That was understandable."

Joe Hart
He said passengers didn't panic on the plane. It was only after the crash when things got chaotic, he said. "It's when we got outside and in the cold water. And I mean the water was cold. Within seconds, my legs were numb, standing in the cold water." See a map of where the plane went down »

"We're just happy to be around. We're just happy to be around."

Jeff Kolodjay
"The plane started filling with water pretty quick. ... It was scary. There was a lady with her baby on my left-hand shoulder, and she was crawling over the seats."

Alberto Panero
On the "brace for impact" moment: "That's the only thing that was said. I guess that's probably a better thing so that people didn't panic. But at the time, he said it so calmly. From that point until we hit the water, it was pretty quick."

He said he turned on his cell phone before impact so that his body could be found via GPS.

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Panero added, "We just hit, and somehow the plane stayed afloat, and we were able to get on the raft. It's just incredible right now that everybody's still alive."

Fred Berretta
"I think a lot of people started praying and just collecting themselves," Berretta said. "It was quite stunning." He said he was expecting the plane to flip over and break apart, but it didn't. "It was a great landing," he said.

Its a Sad day For Chester County, PA & Wilmington, Delaware

Andrew Wyeth, 'Christina's World' painter, dies:

  • Story Highlights
  • Wyeth died in his sleep at 91
  • His most famous painting is that of a young girl in a field
  • His "Helga" portraits were first shown in 1986

(CNN) -- Andrew Wyeth, the American painter perhaps best known for his painting of a young woman in a field, "Christina's World," has died, according to an official with the Brandywine River Museum in Pennsylvania.

Andrew Wyeth received the National Medal of Arts from President Bush in November 2007.

Andrew Wyeth received the National Medal of Arts from President Bush in November 2007.

Wyeth, 91, died in his sleep Thursday night at his home near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, according to Lora Englehart, public relations coordinator for the museum.

The acclaimed artist painted landscapes and figure subjects and worked mostly in tempera and watercolor.

He was widely celebrated inside and outside of the art world. President John F. Kennedy awarded him a Presidential Freedom Award and President Richard Nixon held a dinner and a private exhibition at the White House, according to a biography on the Ask/Art Web site.

Wyeth, who lived in Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania, and Maine, "has been enormously popular and critically acclaimed since his first one-man show in 1937," according to a biography in InfoPlease.

His main subjects were the places and people of Chadds Ford and Cushing, Maine.

"Christina's World," painted in 1948, shows a disabled Maine neighbor who drags herself through a field toward her house in the distance. The painting, displayed at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, has been regarded as Wyeth's most popular.

"His 'Helga' pictures, a large group of intimate portraits of a neighbor, painted over many years, were first shown publicly in 1986," the InfoPlease biography says. Those were painted in Pennsylvania.

Wyeth, the youngest child of painter N.C. Wyeth, formally studied art with his father as a teen, "drawing in charcoal and painting in oils, the media of choice for N.C. Wyeth. It was during the family's annual summer vacations in Port Clyde, Maine, that Andrew was able to experiment with other media to find his own artistic voice," according to a biography in the Farnsworth Art Museum in Maine.

12.1.09

Thousands mourn Sri Lanka editor

I said it before, and I'll say it again.
I don't have to ask what this world is coming to- I already know.

Funeral in Colombo
Mr Wickramatunga was shot last Thursday by unidentified gunmen

Thousands of mourners have attended the funeral of a leading Sri Lankan newspaper editor and fierce government critic who was shot dead last week.

Security was tight in Colombo as crowds paid their last respects to Sunday Leader editor Lasantha Wickramatunga.

Reports say some 10,000 people attended a Christian service ahead of a burial ceremony at Colombo's main cemetery.

Journalists in Sri Lanka have suffered a string of attacks as the war with Tamil Tiger rebels has intensified.

Media freedom groups say intimidation and violence make it one of the most difficult countries in the world in which to report.

Death threats

Mourners packed the Assembly of God church in Colombo on Monday afternoon for the service for Lasantha Wickramatunga. His burial was to take place later at Colombo General Cemetery, the city's main burial ground.

Police investigate shattered windscreen of car of newspaper editor Lasantha Wickramatunga in the suburbs of Colombo, Sri Lanka, Thursday, 8 Jan, 2009
Police are investigating the attack

Mr Wickramatunga was shot last Thursday by unidentified gunmen as he drove to work. He died from head wounds after nearly three hours of surgery, doctors said.

Police have yet to make any arrests.

Correspondents say Mr Wickramatunga had numerous run-ins with the government. His killing was one of two major attacks on the media in Sri Lanka last week.

On Tuesday, gunmen armed with grenades ransacked offices of the MBC group, the largest private TV broadcaster in the country.

Mr Wickramatunga worked for the channel as a presenter on a weekly current affairs programme.

MBC had been criticised by the government for its coverage of the war against the Tamil Tigers.

Mr Wickramatunga, 52, and his newspaper had been highly critical of government policy and the war with the Tamil Tiger rebels.

He received numerous death threats throughout his career and was detained on several occasions because of the controversial nature of his stories. He also fought a number of libel cases.

'Intimidation'

Amnesty International said in November that at least 10 media employees had been killed in Sri Lanka since 2006.

Some reporters say the intimidation has got worse as the war has intensified with the Tamil Tigers.

The Sri Lankan government has been accused of encouraging violence against the media by branding reporters seen as critical as rebel-sympathisers and enemies of the state.

The government has condemned the incidents and ordered full police investigations.

President Rajapaksa said he was "grieved and shocked" by Mr Wickramatunga's killing.


11.1.09

Looters at the gates

Posted By Uncle Jimbo

The current economic crisis bears considerable resemblance to the global warming crisis. We are told the sky is falling by pointy-headed know-it-alls who couldn't possibly know all about systems so large they defy puny human attempts to model them. And in both cases the solutions proposed could be as dangerous as the crises themselves.

The ongoing fiasco here in Washington was created by fools meddling in the housing markets in an altruistic effort to make sure more minorities owned homes. Now these same fools think they can fix their mistake by printing money and shoveling it out the door of the Capitol. I guess they envision the Obama riding his white unicorn dispatching satchels of Hope & Change dollars to deserving souls.

Well I protest! We may actually have a once in a lifetime crisis here, but I am unconvinced that blowing tons of borrowed money and propping up failed industries is the correct answer.

Government is a necessary evil and almost always the worst and least effective solution to any problem. We need national defense and..... well, give me a second, we need a national defense and I'm sure few other things run centrally. But what ever happened to the notion that government should be kept small enough to be drowned in a bathtub if necessary. Our current Parliament of Hoors seems hell bent on unleashing a sea of red ink that may drown us all. Every looter and moocher is cobbling together their mewling request for a slice of the pie or in some cases their own bakery. Some podunk craphole with 179 citizens had the unmitigated gall to ask for $350M. It's enough to make a guy consider going on strike and refusing to carry these baby possums around anymore. You knew where this was going and I never believed it really would, but.....

Atlas Shrugged is a book that should be required reading for every American at about the age of 16. Love it or hate it, you will choose a side in the struggle between socialism and individualism.

Who owns the output of your efforts? I DO

Who will distribute the wealth you create from the sweat of your own brow? I WILL

The left cannot stop themselves from the view that greedy Scrooge McDucks are oppressing workers so they can wallow in piles of filthy lucre.

They know that if they simply had access to that money, they could make America the paradise they envision. (HARDLY)

They hate to be reminded that their goal is really from each according to ability, to each according to need, but it is. It somehow never occurs to them to actually generate some wealth to redistribute if that is such a great idea. Nope, they simply look around for success and then lay claim to it in the name of the downtrodden.

Stephen Moore lays out a chilling look at the parallels between those exploiting the current crisis to remake our free systems and the looter-driven destruction detailed in Atlas Shrugged.

In the book, these relentless wealth redistributionists and their programs are disparaged as "the looters and their laws." Every new act of government futility and stupidity carries with it a benevolent-sounding title. These include the "Anti-Greed Act" to redistribute income (sounds like Charlie Rangel's promises soak-the-rich tax bill) and the "Equalization of Opportunity Act" to prevent people from starting more than one business (to give other people a chance). My personal favorite, the "Anti Dog-Eat-Dog Act," aims to restrict cut-throat competition between firms and thus slow the wave of business bankruptcies. Why didn't Hank Paulson think of that?

These acts and edicts sound farcical, yes, but no more so than the actual events in Washington, circa 2008. We already have been served up the $700 billion "Emergency Economic Stabilization Act" and the "Auto Industry Financing and Restructuring Act." Now that Barack Obama is in town, he will soon sign into law with great urgency the "American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan." This latest Hail Mary pass will increase the federal budget (which has already expanded by $1.5 trillion in eight years under George Bush) by an additional $1 trillion -- in roughly his first 100 days in office.

The current economic strategy is right out of "Atlas Shrugged": The more incompetent you are in business, the more handouts the politicians will bestow on you. That's the justification for the $2 trillion of subsidies doled out already to keep afloat distressed insurance companies, banks, Wall Street investment houses, and auto companies -- while standing next in line for their share of the booty are real-estate developers, the steel industry, chemical companies, airlines, ethanol producers, construction firms and even catfish farmers.

The auto industry in the US bears the most offensive resemblance as the not so Big Three whinge that they are unable to match those dastardly Dog Eat Dog foreign car companies who pay wages commensurate with the work being done. Gettelfinger of the UAW, who sounds exactly like a Rand creation, wails that requiring the unions to live within their means is somehow un-American, that if the evil car companies can't make a profit it's not the fault of his team. They sit idly by as management is unable to fire even the most incompetent losers and the companies are bound by 6,000 pages of work rules. Gettelfinger believes his stranglehold on productivity is an inalienable right to live high on a hog he and his his workers have already slaughtered and eaten.

I now regret supporting John McCain and wholeheartedly back Obama and those on his team who will remind America that wealth and prosperity have to be created. They cannot be co-opted and given to co-ops that consume what others have toiled to construct. The battle between the state and man is back on with a vengeance and I know where my allegiances lie.

8.1.09

Introduction to Economic Espionage


"Economic Espionage is the greatest threat to our national security since the Cold War."

-- Louis Freeh, former FBI Director

The largest business crisis in America today is economic espionage. And that's downright criminal.

Last year, economic espionage and theft of trade secrets cost U.S. businesses more than $250 billion, and $1.2 trillion in the last decade. More than 56 percent of the Fortune 1000 admit to having been victimized; and it is more than likely that the other 44 percent are either too reticent to admit it or simply haven't yet discovered that they, too, have been targeted by corporate spies or thieves -- foreign and domestic. Sometimes the thieves are business competitors, sometimes rouge employees seeking to strike out on their own with your hard work, trade secrets and other intellectual property as their personal grubstake. Sometimes the spy works for a foreign nation or foreign-owned entity; and often the culprit is the business associate you trust most.

It's not hard to figure out why economic espionage carried out against U.S. companies is on a steady rise when you consider that the United States spends more money on research and development than all other G-8 countries (Canada, Japan, Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Russia) combined.

Can anything be done to stop economic espionage?

Stop it, no; stem it, yes.

The Economic Espionage Act (EEA) of 1996 was passed by Congress, at the urging of the FBI, in order to put some teeth into otherwise weak and ineffectual laws. The EEA now makes economic espionage a federal offense with stiff prison sentences and fines up to $10 million. But is it enough? Sadly, the answer is, "No." Economic espionage must be fought in the trenches one company at a time, and it is incumbent upon all at-risk companies to take steps to identify and protect important trade secrets and other intellectual property.

Companies must take proactive steps to reduce their risks.

Which companies are at risk? Those that are vulnerable go far beyond just defense contractors, high tech concerns, manufacturing facilities, computer companies, pharmaceutical manufacturers, chemical companies, food companies, or major industrial giants.

In fact, the only thing necessary for economic espionage to flourish is for a company to have at least one employee and/or at least one competitor. Specific industry groups do not matter. And medium-sized companies, who have the largest number of competitors, are most at risk

Lexicon Communications helps companies increase their security and protect their trade secrets, from vulnerability audits to education and training of employees, as well as offering support to victimized companies.


Economic Espionage is a business crisis.
For more information on
Crisis Management and Crisis Communications,
as well as detailed background on Lexicon,
please visit: www.crisismanagement.com


Economic Espionage | About Lexicon | Protecting Trade Secrets | Client Services | Education & Training
Sticky Fingers |
Economic Espionage Case Updates | Speakers Bureau

We've even outsourced Espionage

Two Silicon Valley Cases Raise Fears of Chinese Espionage

U.S. Agents Try to Tie Alleged Tech Thefts
To Companies Run by Chinese Government

By JOHN R. WILKE
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

SAN JOSE, Calif. -- Federal agents are investigating whether Chinese companies were involved in alleged attempts to steal vital commercial technologies from two Silicon Valley companies.

Authorities see the two cases as part of an emerging pattern of trade-secrets theft aimed at helping Chinese enterprises. In both instances, the alleged thieves were arrested at San Francisco airport as they tried to board flights to China. The technologies at issue include computer-chip designs and software used to find oil and gas, executives of the allegedly targeted U.S. companies and federal officials say.

Investigators haven't found any links in the cases to China's state security apparatus, but they have uncovered ties to other government-controlled entities. Central- and local-government entities own most businesses in China, but they often are autonomous and pursue profits aggressively.

Denials by Chinese Government

A Chinese Embassy official in Washington said there was no central-government involvement in the cases, calling them isolated instances carried out by individuals. "There are several cases like this now in Silicon Valley," the official said. Likewise, a consular spokeswoman in San Francisco called such incidents "personal behavior [that has] nothing to do with the China government."

Prosecutors haven't charged any government entity in either of the pending cases, and there is no suggestion the two are connected. But the prosecutors and Federal Bureau of Investigation agents have noticed an increase in industrial spying by individuals associated with Chinese companies. While French and Japanese companies have been implicated in past economic espionage cases, federal officials suspect Chinese entities are now among the worst offenders. Experts say economic espionage of all stripes is on the rise, causing at least $45 billion in annual losses for the 1,000 largest U.S. companies, according to a PricewaterhouseCoopers survey released in 2001.

Federal officials say the problem is especially prevalent in California's Silicon Valley, where stealing a company's crown jewels can be as easy as clicking a computer mouse. "The losses to companies can be astronomical," says federal prosecutor Ross Nadel, who investigates such cases as chief of the San Francisco U.S. attorney's computer-hacking and intellectual-property unit. In addition to the pending criminal cases, Mr. Nadel said many other attempts to steal trade secrets for companies in China and elsewhere have been thwarted by FBI agents during the past two years, though prosecutors were unable to secure indictments in some instances. Prosecutions are hindered when "the victim companies don't come forward to report the crime or don't cooperate with federal officials" to avoid exposing their losses, he said.

HIGH-TECH INSECURITY

Recent economic-espionage and trade-secrets cases:

Dec. 4, 2002:
Fei Ye, 36, and Ming Zhong, 35, indicted for conspiracy to take trade secrets from four Silicon Valley companies to China.

Sept. 17: Yan Ming Shan (pictured above), an employee of PetroChina, arrested for unauthorized entry into a computer at seismic-imaging firm 3DGeo Development of Mountain View, Calif.

June 19:
Jiangyu Zhu, 30, and Kayoko Kimbara, 32, arrested for the theft of trade secrets from Harvard Medical School's Department of Cell Biology while they were research fellows.

April 11:
Hai Lin, 30, and Kai Xu, 33, former Lucent Technologies scientists, and Yong-Qing Cheng, 37, a consultant, were charged with stealing trade secrets from Lucent for transfer to a joint venture with a Chinese telecommunications firm.

May 8, 2001:
Takashi Okamoto, 40, and Hiroaki Serizawa, 39, become the first people charged with violating the Economic Espionage Act. The pair allegedly stole genetic materials from the Cleveland Clinic Foundation and transferred them to a Japanese research agency.

Source: Justice Department

"From a bottom-line perspective, economic espionage makes great sense -- it's relatively easy, and there's little chance of getting caught or punished," said Steven Fink, president of Lexicon Communications Corp., a Los Angeles firm that advises companies on how to prevent such losses.

In the most recent case, an indictment that was filed in federal court here last month alleged that two California residents conspired to steal secrets from four companies, including Sun Microsystems Inc., NEC Electronics Corp. and Transmeta Corp., the developer of an innovative new laptop computer chip. The men -- Fei Ye, an American citizen living in Cupertino, and Ming Zhong, a Chinese national living as a legal resident in San Jose -- had been arrested at the airport a year earlier, allegedly as they tried to fly to China with trade secrets in their luggage. Their arrests attracted little attention at the time.

Ties to City of Hangzhou?

The indictment alleges the men had ties to a Chinese government technology-development program and the southeast China city of Hangzhou, which is trying to expand its electronics industry. The indictment says the city helped fund a joint venture, Hangzhou Zhingtian Microsystems Co., formed by the men to commercialize the stolen technology. Federal agents found correspondence between the men and officials with the technology program -- formally known as the National High-Technology Research and Development Program of China -- as well as the joint venture's charter. One document, translated by the FBI, said a government "panel of experts" found the venture would have "a positive effect on development of China's integrated-circuit industry" and recommended that "every government department implement and provide energetic support."

People familiar with the matter say investigators are actively studying what role, if any, the city and the technology program played in the alleged conspiracy.

Economic Espionage Act Used

Both men have denied the charges through lawyers, saying the documents in their luggage weren't trade secrets. Hangzhou officials said they had never heard of Hangzhou Zhingtian Microsystems or the two men in the indictment. A supporter of one of the defendants suggested that ethnic bias may have played a role in the investigation, asserting that the men wouldn't have been arrested "if these had been white businessmen flying to Ireland."

The two men were charged under the rarely used Economic Espionage Act of 1996, which outlaws possession of stolen trade secrets with the intent to benefit a foreign nation. When the law passed, then-FBI Director Louis Freeh called economic espionage the "greatest threat to our national security since the Cold War."

Under the law, trade-secret thieves can be charged with economic espionage even if they act without the direction of a foreign company or government. For example, two Lucent Technologies Inc. employees were indicted in 2001 on federal economic-espionage charges for allegedly stealing the software code of a popular voice- and data-management product called Pathstar. They created a joint venture with China's state-owned phone company, Datang Telecom Technology Co., but prosecutors didn't allege that the company knew in advance that the software was stolen. The case is awaiting trial in New Jersey.

In another case under investigation here, an employee of PetroChina, a state-owned oil company, is alleged to have illegally downloaded the secret design -- or "source code" -- of one of the world's most powerful software tools for locating oil and gas deposits. The employee, a Chinese national named Yan Ming Shan, was training on the software at 3DGeo Development Inc. in Mountain View, Calif., and copied it into his laptop, a federal indictment alleges. He was arrested at San Francisco airport in September and remains in Santa Clara County Jail, on federal charges of fraud and unauthorized computer entry.

While he isn't charged under the economic-espionage act, the FBI is continuing to investigate his actions and could seek a superseding indictment adding new charges, as they have done in other recent cases, law enforcement officials said. Executives of 3DGeo said FBI agents recently subpoenaed the PetroChina employee's e-mails and other evidence.

The defendant has pleaded not guilty through his lawyer, Nick Humy of the federal public defender's office in Santa Clara. An official in PetroChina's Houston office declined to comment, referring inquiries to the company's headquarters in China; officials there didn't respond to inquiries.

Employee Surveillance

A unit of PetroChina sent its employee to the U.S. for training on 3DGeo's seismic-imaging software, which uses proprietary algorithms to sift through seismic data and locate oil deposits. Dimitri Bevc, 3DGeo's co-founder and chairman, said employees "were keeping an eye on" Mr. Shan because two years earlier another PetroChina employee had entered the company's offices on a weekend and entered its computer network without permission.

One day last September, a 3DGeo employee noticed that something was awry with his computer. The employee discovered that Yan Ming Shan had transferred the company's most precious software source code from the network to this employee's computer. Later, the software was discovered on Yan Ming Shan's laptop, prosecutors alleged.

Employees of 3DGeo confronted him about the transferred files in early September. A week later, on Sept. 17, he was arrested at the airport as he prepared to board a plane to China. Later, FBI agents found a program called "Crack" on his laptop, which is used to break passwords and gain unauthorized access to computer networks. They discovered that when a group of company officials from China had visited Yan Ming Shan several weeks earlier, one of them bought him a detachable disk drive capable of storing large amounts of data.

"It could have killed the company" if he had successfully stolen the source code and given it to his employer, said Mihai Popovici, 3DGeo's chief executive. He added, however, that 3DGeo hopes to continue working with PetroChina, which told 3DGeo executives it had no knowledge of any intention by Yan Ming Shan to steal company secrets.

"Companies are under attack and at great risk," said Lexicon's Mr. Fink, author of "Sticky Fingers," a new book about economic espionage. "They need to take steps to protect themselves."

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