Sen. Kennedy's Take on Chuck Schumer Post-Shutdown Was Short, Sweet, and Exceptionally Bru...
C-SPAN Caller Absolutely Blew Up This Dem Rep's Narrative About the Shutdown
Therapist Says 75 Percent of His Patients are Suffering From This Mental Health...
Chaos Breaks Out in This City After Anti-ICE Protesters Clash With Police
Louisiana Girl Expelled for Altercation With Classmates Who Shared AI-Generated Images of...
Tom Homan Takes Catholic Bishops to the Cleaners Over Video Condemning Deportations
Meet the Hammerbande, One of the Groups the US Classified As an International...
Graham Platner's Campaign Failed to File His Personal Financial Disclosures
'Sadistic and Evil' Wisconsin Teen a True Failure of Justice System
Trump Signs Order Rolling Back Tariffs on Hundreds of Food Items
Zohran Mamdani's Secret Meeting
Senate CR Contained Provision to Let GOP Senators Sue Over Operation Arctic Frost
Trump Orders DOJ to Investigate Epstein’s Ties to Top Democrats and Major Banks
US Agriculture Secretary Announces SNAP Overhaul
DOJ Seeks Forfeiture of $15M in Virtual Currency Stolen and Laundered by North...
Tipsheet

Illegal Chinese Immigrant, Accomplice Caught Smuggling U.S. Microchips to China

Sarah Silbiger/Pool via AP, File

Two Chinese nationals were arrested for knowingly exporting tens of millions of dollars worth of microchips used exclusively to power AI technology, according to the United States Department of Justice.

Advertisement

Chuan Geng of Pasadena, California, and Shiwei Yang of El Monte, California, are facing felony charges under the Export Control Reform Act, with a maximum sentence of 20 years. Geng turned himself in on Saturday. Yang, an illegal immigrant who has overstayed her visa, was arrested earlier that day.

According to the affidavit, from October 2022 to July 2025, Geng and Yang used their El Monte-based company, ALX Solutions Inc., to knowingly ship sensitive tech, GPUs, and other high-end computer parts used exclusively for AI-based technology to China, without the required license from the U.S. Department of Commerce.

Officials reviewed export records, business filings, and company websites, indicating that a December 2024 shipment, along with at least 20 others before it, were routed through Singapore and Malaysia. Both are well-known transshipment hubs used to mask illegal exports to China. Their company did not receive payments from the businesses they were shipping the parts to, but from companies based in Hong Kong and China. 

Advertisement

According to the complaint and public filings, the chip in question, made by a top-tier AI chipmaker, is the “most powerful GPU chip on the market,” and “designed specifically for AI applications,” including everything from self-driving cars to medical diagnosis systems and other advanced technology. 

Law enforcement seized the mobile devices of the defendants, where they found evidence of communication between the defendants about shipping the microchips through Malaysia in order to evade U.S. export laws.

The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Colin S. Scott, Joseph Guzman, and Jenna Long of the Central District of California, with support from Chantelle Dial, a trial attorney in the National Security Division’s Counterintelligence and Export Control Section. 

Editor's NotePresident Trump is leading America into the "Golden Age" as Democrats try desperately to stop it.  

Help us continue to report on President Trump's successes. Join Townhall VIP and use promo code FIGHT for 60% off your membership.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos