| Engineer Pleads Guilty to Stealing for Chinese  Government’s Benefit Trade Secret Technology Designed for Missile Launch  and Detection 
 
 justice.gov
 
 A  Santa Clara County man and former engineer at a Southern California  company pleaded guilty today to stealing trade secret technologies  developed for use by the U.S. government to detect nuclear missile  launches, track ballistic and hypersonic missiles, and to allow U.S.  fighter planes to detect and evade heat-seeking missiles.
 
 Chenguang Gong, 59, of San Jose, pleaded guilty to one count of theft of trade secrets. He remains free on $1.75 million bond.
 
 According  to his plea agreement, Gong – a dual citizen of the United States and  China – transferred more than 3,600 files from a Los Angeles-area  research and development company where he worked – identified in court  documents as the victim company – to personal storage devices during his  brief tenure with the company last year.
 
 The files Gong  transferred include blueprints for sophisticated infrared sensors  designed for use in space-based systems to detect nuclear missile  launches and track ballistic and hypersonic missiles, as well as  blueprints for sensors designed to enable U.S. military aircraft to  detect incoming heat-seeking missiles and take countermeasures,  including by jamming the missiles’ infrared tracking ability. Some of  these files were later found on storage devices seized from Gong’s  temporary residence in Thousand Oaks.
 
 In January 2023, the victim  company hired Gong as an application-specific integrated circuit design  manager responsible for the design, development and verification of its  infrared sensors. Beginning on approximately March 30, 2023, and  continuing until his termination on April 26, 2023, Gong transferred  thousands of files from his work laptop to three personal storage  devices, including more than 1,800 files after he had accepted a job at  one of the victim company’s main competitors.
 
 Many of the files  Gong transferred contained proprietary and trade secret information  related to the development and design of a readout integrated circuit  that allows space-based systems to detect missile launches and track  ballistic and hypersonic missiles and a readout integrated circuit that  allows aircraft to track incoming threats in low visibility  environments.
 
 Gong also transferred files containing trade  secrets relating to the development of “next generation” sensors capable  of detecting low observable targets while demonstrating increased  survivability in space, as well as the blueprints for the mechanical  assemblies used to house and cryogenically cool the victim company’s  sensors. This information was among the victim company’s most important  trade secrets that are worth hundreds of millions of dollars. Many of  the files had been marked “[VICTIM COMPANY] PROPRIETARY,” “FOR OFFICIAL  USE ONLY,” “PROPRIETARY INFORMATION,” and “EXPORT CONTROLLED.”
 
 Law  enforcement also discovered that, between approximately 2014 and 2022,  while employed at several major technology companies in the United  States, Gong submitted numerous applications to ‘Talent Programs’  administered by the People’s Republic of China (PRC). The PRC government  has established these talent programs as a means to identify  individuals who have expert skills, abilities, and knowledge of advanced  sciences and technologies in order to access and utilize those skills  and knowledge in transforming the PRC’s economy, including its military  capabilities.
 
 In 2014, while employed at a U.S. information  technology company headquartered in Dallas, Gong sent a business  proposal to a contact at a high-tech research institute in China focused  on both military and civilian products. In his proposal, translated  from Chinese, Gong described a plan to produce high-performance  analog-to-digital converters like those produced by his employer. In  another Talent Program application from September 2020, Gong proposed to  develop “low light/night vision” image sensors for use in military  night vision goggles and civilian applications. Gong’s proposal included  a video presentation that contained the model number of a sensor  developed by an international defense, aerospace, and security company  where Gong worked from 2015 to 2019.
 
 Gong travelled to China  several times to seek Talent Program funding in order to develop  sophisticated analog-to-digital converters. In his Talent Program  applications, Gong underscored that the high-performance  analog-to-digital converters he proposed to develop in China had  military applications, explaining that they “directly determine the  accuracy and range of radar systems” and that “[m]issile navigation  systems also often use radar front-end systems.” In a 2019 email,  translated from Chinese, Gong remarked that he “took a risk” by  traveling to China to participate in the Talent Programs “because [he]  worked for…an American military industry company” and thought he could  “do something” to contribute to China’s “high-end military integrated  circuits.”
 
 Tom
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