Harvard professor accused of working on behalf of China


Photo credit: The China Project illustration by Derek Zheng.
Charles M. Lieber, the chair of Harvardโs department of chemistry and chemical biology, was arrested and โchargedย on Tuesday with making false statements about money he had received from a Chinese government-run program.โ Lieber was โone 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 โto root out theft of biomedical researchย from American laboratories.โ Lieberโs case โinvolves work with the Thousand Talents Program, a state-run program that seeks to draw talent educated in other countries.โ
Lieber โstands out among the accused scientistsย because he is neither Chinese nor of Chinese descent,โ although he โhas 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
โLieber 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 โZaosong Zhengโฆa Harvard-affiliated cancer researcher who prosecutors said was caught with 21 vials of cells stolen from a laboratoryย at Beth Israel Deaconess Hospitalโ and โYanqing Yeโฆwho 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.





