U.S. says it has arrested another Chinese researcher accused of smuggling biological material
Share and Follow

U.S. authorities said Monday that they had arrested a Chinese researcher accused of smuggling biological material into the country, the second such case in days.

The FBI said in a criminal complaint that the researcher, identified as Chengxuan Han, a Chinese doctoral student at the College of Life Science and Technology at the Huazhong University of Science and Technology in Wuhan, was arrested Sunday at the airport in Detroit.

According to the complaint, since September, Han has sent four shipments from China containing concealed biological material to staff members at a laboratory at the University of Michigan, where she planned to spend a year completing a project. Officials said Han made false statements about the shipments when federal agents questioned her about them when she arrived in the United States from Shanghai.

Two Chinese nationals were charged last week after the FBI said it had been determined that one tried to smuggle a toxic fungus into the United States, also for research at the University of Michigan, it alleged. One, a researcher at the university, was arrested and remains in custody, while the other was denied entry to the United States last year and remains at large.

According to the complaint, the biological material Han is accused of smuggling — sometimes hidden between pages of a book — is related to roundworms and requires a government permit.

The complaint also alleges that Han deleted the contents of her electronic device three days before she arrived in Detroit.

“Han stated she deleted the content to ‘start fresh’ while she was in the United States,” it says.

Han is in custody ahead of a bond hearing Wednesday.

The Chinese Embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment outside business hours.

With regard to the two Chinese nationals who were previously charged, a spokesperson for the Chinese Foreign Affairs Ministry said last week that he was not aware of the situation but that the Chinese government “has always required Chinese citizens overseas to strictly abide by local laws and regulations, while also safeguarding their legitimate rights and interests in accordance with the law.”

The University of Michigan also did not immediately reply to a request for comment Monday outside business hours.

In a statement in response to the case last week, the university said it was cooperating with federal law enforcement and that it strongly condemned “any actions that seek to cause harm, threaten national security or undermine the university’s critical public mission.”

Victor Galea, a professor of plant pathology at the University of Queensland in Australia, said that while the fungus, known as Fusarium graminearum, is found in every part of the world where wheat is grown, a genetic variant from a different country “can be more aggressive or virulent, and so this is why we have biosecurity regulations to prevent people from moving fungal pathogens from one part of the world to the other.”

Similarly, while research material such as what Han is accused of smuggling can be moved between countries, it should be done “through all the appropriate agreements and controls,” Galea said.

The roundworms “could be damaging to crops or the environment, or it may be that they’re benign and they don’t do anything,” he said. “But you can’t determine that unless this is thoroughly investigated.”

Share and Follow
You May Also Like
Zelenskyy touts 'fruitful' Trump call after US president was 'disappointed' by Putin talk

Zelenskyy touts ‘fruitful’ Trump call after US president was ‘disappointed’ by Putin talk

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy…
Liam Gallagher apologizes for using racial slur before Oasis reunion

Liam Gallagher issues apology for using racial slur ahead of Oasis reunion

Liam Gallagher is on an apology tour. The Oasis frontman, 52, came…
Doctors warn of dangerous trend putting millions at risk of cancer

“Health Alert: Millions at Risk of Cancer Due to Dangerous Trend, Warn Doctors”

A fringe theory is catching fire online, and health experts are sounding…
Influencer Tanner Martin laid to rest after announcing his own death

Influencer Tanner Martin has Funeral Service After Revealing His Own Passing

Influencer Tanner Martin was laid to rest during a funeral service in…
What to drink over coffee... after study finds it may cause blindness

Alternatives to Coffee: Options to Consider After Study Suggests Link to Blindness

If you can’t get through the day without a dose of caffeine…
North Korean avoids land mines to cross DMZ into South Korea as Seoul softens stance on Pyongyang

North Korean avoids land mines to cross DMZ into South Korea as Seoul softens stance on Pyongyang

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! A North Korean man…
How my friendship with a serial killer led me to his victims

Discovering the victims through my friendship with a serial killer

Peter Vronsky, a forensic historian, affectionately refers to Richard Cottingham as ‘my…
A-lister mansion that takes up a ZIPCODE... with mysterious symbols

Luxurious Mansion Covers Entire Area with Secret Symbols

Plenty of Hollywood stars own lavish estates, but only one – that…