Harvard professor charged with lying about China ties goes on trial

Reuters

By Nate Raymond

BOSTON – A federal jury was selected on Tuesday in the trial of a Harvard University nanotechnology professor accused of lying to U.S. authorities about his ties to a China-run recruitment program and concealing funding he received from the Chinese government.

The Boston jury will return on Wednesday to hear lawyers deliver opening statements in the trial of Charles Lieber, an ex-chair of Harvard’s chemistry department charged in the highest-profile case to result from a U.S. crackdown on Chinese influence within universities.


Lieber, 62, has pleaded not guilty to six false statement and tax charges. His lawyer, Marc Mukasey, has said Lieber “didn’t hide anything, and he didn’t get paid as the government alleges.”

Prosecutors charged Lieber in January 2020 as part of the U.S. Department of Justice’s “China Initiative” it started during former President Donald Trump’s administration to combat Chinese economic espionage and research theft.

President Joe Biden’s administration has not backed away from the initiative, despite critics who say it went too far in pursuing academics and that it overly targeted Chinese nationals.

The first trial of an academic – a Tennessee professor – ended in a mistrial and later an acquittal by a judge. Prosecutors this year dropped charges against six other researchers.

A Justice Department review of how it approaches countering threats posed by China is expected to be completed in the coming weeks, agency spokesman Wyn Hornbuckle said.

Prosecutors said Lieber in 2011 became a “strategic scientist” at Wuhan University of Technology and through it participated in a Chinese recruitment drive called the Thousand Talents Program.

U.S. authorities say China uses the program to entice foreign researchers to share their knowledge with China in exchange for perks including research funding.

As part of the program, the Wuhan university gave Lieber more than $1.5 million to establish a Chinese lab and agreed to pay him $50,000 per month plus $150,000 in annual living expenses.

Prosecutors said Lieber lied to investigators about his involvement in the program and also misled Harvard, which in 2019 told the National Institutes of Health that he was not involved with it.

(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston, Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi, Bill Berkrot and Grant McCool)

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