Close X
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

U.S. One Step Closer To Extraditing Accused Chinese Hacker From Canada

The Canadian Press, 10 Jul, 2015 12:55 PM
    VANCOUVER — The United States has vaulted another hurdle in its bid to extradite a Chinese national living in British Columbia who is accused by the FBI of pilfering American military trade secrets.
     
    Defence lawyer Greg DelBigio fell short of convincing B.C. Supreme Court Justice Bruce Greyell to adjourn Su Bin's extradition hearing until a slew of electronic documents confiscated after the man's arrest in June 2014 could be translated.
     
    The U.S. Department of Justice has accused the man of masterminding a plot to swipe confidential information from several American defence contractors, including Boeing and Lockheed Martin, to pass along to the Chinese government.
     
    DelBigio said a shortage of RCMP resources should prompt an indefinite postponement of the proceedings, arguing that the accused hacker is entitled to have access to any information that could be used against him in court.
     
    "He is disadvantaged only because of resource issues in which he is no way responsible and has no control over," DelBigio told the court.
     
    Greyell dismissed the adjournment application Wednesday afternoon, saying Su failed to apply for disclosure earlier in the proceedings and that the request was overly broad, given that the man would already be familiar with the contents of his seized devices.
     
    Su appeared in court dressed in a crimson-red, prison-issued outfit. He smiled and waved to the public gallery before taking a seat in the prisoner's dock, his interpreter alongside him.
     
    Su heads a China-based aviation technology company called Lode-Tech, which also has an office in Canada.
     
    The court heard that the U.S. is applying to send a team of investigators to Canada to help with extracting and translating data from the seized equipment, which a Crown lawyer described as consisting of "hundreds and hundreds of thousands of documents." That application will come before B.C. Supreme Court in two weeks.
     
    In outlining the evidence against Su, Crown lawyer Diba Majzub explained how two Chinese military officers would allegedly infiltrate the American defence company's networks and relay a listing of available documents to the accused, who would highlight valuable assets for them to steal.
     
    "There are many picture documents — the useful ones are marked in yellow," Majzub quoted Su of writing in an email to one of his alleged co-conspirators. Attached to the correspondence was a 1,647-page spreadsheet listing 50,000 files, the majority of which Majzub said would only have been available internally on a Boeing server.
     
    Another email, sent by Su in May 2012, contained a 120-page flight-test plan for an F-35 stealth fighter plane produced by Lockheed Martin, said Majzub. The court heard that a company engineer put the value of the document at between $12-14 million.
     
    Other data allegedly taken at Su's direction were diagrams and technical backgrounders on the C-17 transport plane and the F-22 fighter aircraft.
     
    A Los Angeles grand jury indicted Su last August on five offences — conspiracy to steal trade secrets, conspiracy to export defence information and three charges related to unauthorized computer access.
     
    None of the allegations has been tested in court.
     
    The Canadian government is attempting to revoke Su's permanent residency status but he is appealing the decision.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Out-Of-Control B.C. Wildfire Forces Evacuations As Residents On Alert

    Out-Of-Control B.C. Wildfire Forces Evacuations As Residents On Alert
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A wildfire south of Lytton, B.C., has grown to 15 square kilometres, prompting crews to burn off potential fuel on the forest floor.

    Out-Of-Control B.C. Wildfire Forces Evacuations As Residents On Alert

    Investigators Try To Identify Human Remains Found During Mass B.C. Search

    Investigators Try To Identify Human Remains Found During Mass B.C. Search
    SAANICH, B.C. — Police say remains that were found on southern Vancouver Island during an extensive search for a missing person are human.

    Investigators Try To Identify Human Remains Found During Mass B.C. Search

    India Remembers Nek Chand, The Creator Of Chandigarh's Famous Rock Garden

    India Remembers Nek Chand, The Creator Of Chandigarh's Famous Rock Garden
    Nek Chand, the creator of Chandigarh's famous Rock Garden, died at the Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research here early Friday following cardiac arrest, his family members said. He was 90.

    India Remembers Nek Chand, The Creator Of Chandigarh's Famous Rock Garden

    Body Of 65-Year-Old Canadian Found Floating In Gulf Of Thailand: Media Reports

    Body Of 65-Year-Old Canadian Found Floating In Gulf Of Thailand: Media Reports
    PATTAYA, Thailand — Local media reports say the body of a 65-year-old Canadian man who disappeared after renting a boat earlier this week has been found in the Gulf of Thailand.

    Body Of 65-Year-Old Canadian Found Floating In Gulf Of Thailand: Media Reports

    Dana Mckellar, Missing B.C. Man, Search Leads To Finding Of Human Remains

    Dana Mckellar, Missing B.C. Man, Search Leads To Finding Of Human Remains
    Investigators representing municipal forces and the RCMP began searching a parcel of land in rural Saanich on June 2 for the remains of Dana McKellar.

    Dana Mckellar, Missing B.C. Man, Search Leads To Finding Of Human Remains

    Sailors March Off Canadian Destroyer Ship Algonquin, As It Retires After 41 Years

    Sailors March Off Canadian Destroyer Ship Algonquin, As It Retires After 41 Years
    ESQUIMALT, B.C. — Forty-one years of distinguished service have come to an end for a Royal Canadian Navy ship that's been retired at a base on Vancouver Island.

    Sailors March Off Canadian Destroyer Ship Algonquin, As It Retires After 41 Years