https://www.arabnews.com/node/1712506/world


Chinese scientist arrested in California after seeking medical care
Juan Tang in her China People's Liberation Army military uniform. (US
Justice Department photo via AP,File)
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https://arab.news/nrvrc
Updated 5 sec ago
AP
July 31, 202005:00
2003
<https://www.arabnews.com/node/1712506/world#>
<https://www.arabnews.com/node/1712506/world#>
<https://www.arabnews.com/node/1712506/world#>
<https://www.arabnews.com/node/1712506/world#>
<https://www.arabnews.com/node/1712506/world#>

   - Juan Tang and three other scientists living in the US face charges of
   lying about their status as members of China’s People’s Liberation Army

SAN FRANCISCO: A Chinese scientist charged with visa fraud after US
authorities said she concealed her military ties was arrested after she
left the Chinese consulate in San Francisco to seek medical care for her
asthma, court documents showed.
Juan Tang, who has a doctorate in cellular biology, entered the United
States on Dec. 27, 2019, to work at the University of California, Davis as
a visiting researcher in the Department of Radiation Oncology, Alexandra
Negin, an assistant federal public defender, said in the filing Wednesday
asking the court for her release on bail.
A hearing on whether Tang, 37, should be released on bail is scheduled
Friday. She is being held at a Sacramento County jail on behalf of federal
authorities after her arrest last week.
Tang and three other scientists living in the US, face charges of lying
about their status as members of China’s People’s Liberation Army. All were
charged with visa fraud, the Justice Department said.
Tang was the last of the four to be arrested after the Justice Department
accused the Chinese consulate in San Francisco of harboring a known
fugitive.
Negin said Tang went to the consulate to seek help and remained there after
FBI agents questioned her at her Davis apartment on June 20 and executed a
search warrant, seizing her passport and visa.
A criminal complaint was filed under seal on June 26 but Tang did not learn
she had been charged with a crime until her July 23 arrest, Negin wrote.
When US agents went to the Chinese consulate to inform her there was a
warrant for her arrest Tang, who has asthma, wanted to surrender but was
“in hysterics” and consulate employees believed she needed to see a doctor.
the filing states.
Negin said she believes federal officers were surveilling the consulate and
after seeing her leave in a vehicle with consular staff, followed them to a
medical office where “Ms. Tang was seen, medically cleared and then
arrested.”
Negin wrote Tang is not a danger to the community and could have remained
in the consulate to avoid arrest.
“Instead she agreed to leave consulate property knowing this would allow
law enforcement to arrest her,” she said.
Tang is married and has an 8-year-old daughter who is in China with Tang’s
husband.
Tang left the family home at 18 to attend college and is a cancer
researcher who had never traveled outside China before coming to the United
States to do cancer research as part of a one-year program, Negin said.
Negin said Tang left her job in June as a visiting researcher at UC, Davis’
Department of Radiation Oncology because her lab was closed due to the
coronavirus pandemic. She planned to return to China.
Agents found photographs of Tang in a uniform of the civilian cadre of
China’s PLA and also reviewed articles from China that identified her
military affiliation.
But Negin argued the evidence against Tang is based on old photographs from
when she was a student at a medical school run by the military and
documents that were translated on apps.
“That does not mean that she was ‘in the military,” Negin wrote.
“She has every incentive to see this case through to its conclusion and
return to China after the case is resolved,” Negin added.
Juan Tang in her China People's Liberation Army military uniform. (US
Justice Department photo via AP,File)
Short Url

https://arab.news/nrvrc
Updated 5 sec ago
AP
July 31, 202005:00
2003
<https://www.arabnews.com/node/1712506/world#>
<https://www.arabnews.com/node/1712506/world#>
<https://www.arabnews.com/node/1712506/world#>
<https://www.arabnews.com/node/1712506/world#>
<https://www.arabnews.com/node/1712506/world#>

   - Juan Tang and three other scientists living in the US face charges of
   lying about their status as members of China’s People’s Liberation Army

SAN FRANCISCO: A Chinese scientist charged with visa fraud after US
authorities said she concealed her military ties was arrested after she
left the Chinese consulate in San Francisco to seek medical care for her
asthma, court documents showed.
Juan Tang, who has a doctorate in cellular biology, entered the United
States on Dec. 27, 2019, to work at the University of California, Davis as
a visiting researcher in the Department of Radiation Oncology, Alexandra
Negin, an assistant federal public defender, said in the filing Wednesday
asking the court for her release on bail.
A hearing on whether Tang, 37, should be released on bail is scheduled
Friday. She is being held at a Sacramento County jail on behalf of federal
authorities after her arrest last week.
Tang and three other scientists living in the US, face charges of lying
about their status as members of China’s People’s Liberation Army. All were
charged with visa fraud, the Justice Department said.
Tang was the last of the four to be arrested after the Justice Department
accused the Chinese consulate in San Francisco of harboring a known
fugitive.
Negin said Tang went to the consulate to seek help and remained there after
FBI agents questioned her at her Davis apartment on June 20 and executed a
search warrant, seizing her passport and visa.
A criminal complaint was filed under seal on June 26 but Tang did not learn
she had been charged with a crime until her July 23 arrest, Negin wrote.
When US agents went to the Chinese consulate to inform her there was a
warrant for her arrest Tang, who has asthma, wanted to surrender but was
“in hysterics” and consulate employees believed she needed to see a doctor.
the filing states.
Negin said she believes federal officers were surveilling the consulate and
after seeing her leave in a vehicle with consular staff, followed them to a
medical office where “Ms. Tang was seen, medically cleared and then
arrested.”
Negin wrote Tang is not a danger to the community and could have remained
in the consulate to avoid arrest.
“Instead she agreed to leave consulate property knowing this would allow
law enforcement to arrest her,” she said.
Tang is married and has an 8-year-old daughter who is in China with Tang’s
husband.
Tang left the family home at 18 to attend college and is a cancer
researcher who had never traveled outside China before coming to the United
States to do cancer research as part of a one-year program, Negin said.
Negin said Tang left her job in June as a visiting researcher at UC, Davis’
Department of Radiation Oncology because her lab was closed due to the
coronavirus pandemic. She planned to return to China.
Agents found photographs of Tang in a uniform of the civilian cadre of
China’s PLA and also reviewed articles from China that identified her
military affiliation.
But Negin argued the evidence against Tang is based on old photographs from
when she was a student at a medical school run by the military and
documents that were translated on apps.
“That does not mean that she was ‘in the military,” Negin wrote.
“She has every incentive to see this case through to its conclusion and
return to China after the case is resolved,” Negin added.

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