Harvard professor accused of working on behalf of China

Politics & Current Affairs

charleslieber

Photo credit: The China Project illustration by Derek Zheng.

Charles M. Lieber, the chair of Harvardโ€™s department of chemistry and chemical biology, was arrested and โ€œchargedย on Tuesday with making false statements about money he had received from a Chinese government-run program.โ€ Lieber was โ€œone of three Boston-area scientists accused on Tuesday of working on behalf of China,โ€ reported the New York Timesย (porous paywall).

The arrest is part of a broad-ranging FBI effort โ€œto root out theft of biomedical researchย from American laboratories.โ€ Lieberโ€™s case โ€œinvolves work with the Thousand Talents Program, a state-run program that seeks to draw talent educated in other countries.โ€

Lieber โ€œstands out among the accused scientistsย because he is neither Chinese nor of Chinese descent,โ€ although he โ€œhas made no secret of his work with Chinese partners, joining five senior Chinese officials and scientists in 2013 to found the WUT-Harvard Joint Nano Key Laboratoryย at the Wuhan University of Technology.โ€

โ€œLieber was paid up to $50,000 per monthย in salary and $150,000 per year in living expenses by Wuhan University of Technology [and] awarded more than $1.5 million by the university and the Chinese government to build a laboratory in Wuhan,โ€ according to charging documents.

The other two people chargedย are โ€œZaosong Zhengโ€ฆa Harvard-affiliated cancer researcher who prosecutors said was caught with 21 vials of cells stolen from a laboratoryย at Beth Israel Deaconess Hospitalโ€ and โ€œYanqing Yeโ€ฆwho was charged with visa fraud, making false statements, acting as an agent of a foreign government and conspiracy.โ€

See also on The China Project: The Sinophobia Tracker.