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Mich Kabay takes a high-level view of security issues and provides resources to help safeguard your corporate and personal security.
In the previous article of this series, which is based on the annual reports of the National Counterintelligence Center (later called the Office of the National Counterintelligence Executive), I began a review of some interesting specific cases of industrial espionage from these government reports and others. This article concludes the case reports.
In 1997, John Fulton, a former employee of Joy Mining Machinery, a global coal-mining company, approached a Joy employee in an attempt to purchase schematics for part of the company’s proprietary equipment. The Joy employee reported the attempt and worked with the FBI and his employer to record conversations in which Fulton offered to pay any amount of money for information pertaining to the specific equipment. Fulton paid the cooperating witness $1,500 for blueprints and a technical binder, both of which were Joy proprietary items.
Fulton was arrested by the FBI after the exchange and was charged with unlawfully attempting to obtain trade secrets. Fulton pled guilty to one count of theft of trade secrets and was sentenced in September 1998.
In January 1998, Steven Louis Davis pled guilty to federal charges that he stole and disclosed trade secrets concerning a new shaving system developed by Gillette. Davis was employed by Wright Industries, a subcontractor of Gillette that had been hired to assist in the development of the new shaving system.
The previous year, Davis had made disclosures of technical drawings to Gillette competitors Warner-Lambert Co., Bic and American Safety Razor Co. The disclosures were made by fax and e-mail. Although the FBI is aware that Davis reached out to one foreign-owned company (Bic), it is unclear if he was successful in disseminating trade secrets overseas. Davis was arrested and indicted on counts of wire fraud and theft of trade secrets. Davis was sentenced to two years and three months in federal prison.
In 2001, Junsheng Wang of Bell Imaging Technologies pled guilty to stealing trade secrets from Acuson Corp. The Counterintelligence News and Developments (CIND) report noted:
"In pleading guilty, Wang admitted that prior to August 24, 2000, that he took without authorization and copied for Bell Imaging a document providing the architecture for the Sequoia ultrasound machine that contained the trade secrets of Acuson Corporation. According to Wang's plea agreement, he had been able to obtain access to the Acuson trade secret materials because his wife was employed as an engineer at that company and because she had brought that document into their home. After he had copied the document, he took it with him on business trips to the People's Republic of China, turning it over to Bell Imaging during 2000.”
M. E. Kabay, PhD, CISSP-ISSMP, is Program Director of the Master of Science in Information Assurance program at Norwich University.
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