Chinese Businessman Pleads Guilty to US Computer Hack

A Chinese businessman aided by two soldiers in China walked off with American military information on state-of-the-art aircraft between 2008 and 2014.

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Chinese National Pleads Guilty to US Computer Hack


A businessman from China pleaded guilty Wednesday to hacking into the computer systems of American businesses.

Su Bin, also known as Stephen Su, faces a maximum five-year prison sentence for conspiring with two others. They were found guilty of illegally taking information from American firms that do business with the U.S. government.

Su was accused of hacking into major businesses including Boeing Company and Lockheed Martin, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.

Su began targeting American companies in 2008, according to U.S. court documents. He obtained information about Boeing’s C-17 military transport aircraft in 2010.

Two Chinese soldiers helped Su obtain military information for the F-35 aircraft and other jets, Canadian media reported in January, 2016.

Su was arrested in Canada in 2014. He owned his own aviation technology firm that had an office in Canada, the FBI said. Su agreed to be extradited, according to the Justice Department.

Chinese officials said the “Chinese government organizations and the military oppose and have never participated in any form of Internet hacking activity.”

Cybersecurity is a source of conflict between China and the United States, the Associated Press reported. American companies have lost billions of dollars in sales and in cyber repairs because of hacking.

Sentencing for Su is set for July 13 in Los Angeles.

I’m Jim Dresbach.

Jim Dresbach adapted this story from Reuters for Learning English. Kathleen Struck was the editor.

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Words in This Story

pleadedv. to say in court that you are either guilty or not guilty of a crime

hackv. to secretly get access to the files on a computer or network in order to get information

conspiringv. to secretly plan with someone to do something that is harmful or illegal

extraditedv. to send a person who has been accused of a crime to another state or country for trial

cybersecurityn. the state of being protected against the criminal or harmful use of electronic data