Washington, D.C. — Federal prosecutors have announced the arrest of two Chinese nationals accused of smuggling sensitive American technology worth tens of millions of dollars to China, in a case highlighting growing concerns over the global race for artificial intelligence supremacy.

The defendants, Chuan Geng, 28, of Pasadena, California, and Shiwei Yang, 28, of El Monte, California, are facing federal charges under the Export Control Reform Act, a law designed to protect critical U.S. technologies from unauthorized foreign transfers. The offense carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison.

According to the U.S. Department of Justice, the pair operated through a company called ALX Solutions Inc., which prosecutors say was created shortly after the Commerce Department imposed stricter licensing rules on advanced semiconductors and GPUs. These graphic processing units are among the most powerful in the world and are widely used in AI-driven applications such as autonomous vehicles, medical diagnostic systems, and high-level data processing.

Alleged Export Scheme
Investigators allege that at least 20 shipments of restricted chips were routed through Singapore and Malaysia, both known transshipment hubs frequently exploited to conceal illegal deliveries to mainland China. While ALX Solutions listed foreign companies as the intended recipients, investigators found that the firm never received payments from those entities. Instead, funds flowed directly from companies based in China and Hong Kong, including a single $1 million transfer in early 2024.

In one highlighted instance, prosecutors say ALX Solutions filed export paperwork in December 2024 falsely describing GPU shipments that legally required prior approval from the Commerce Department. Neither Geng, Yang, nor their company had applied for or obtained such authorization.

National Security Concerns
The Justice Department emphasized that the chips involved are considered the most powerful on the global market and are explicitly restricted due to their potential use in both civilian and military AI systems. Such technology can be critical for advances in self-driving car systems, advanced surveillance, and even military weapons guided by artificial intelligence.

Assistant Attorney General Matthew Olsen said in a statement that the arrests send a “clear message” that the U.S. will pursue anyone attempting to smuggle restricted technologies abroad. “These laws exist to protect national security. Export violations involving advanced AI components undermine America’s ability to safeguard critical innovation.”

Arrests and Ongoing Investigation
Geng voluntarily surrendered to authorities on Saturday, while Yang was arrested the same day. Prosecutors noted that one of the men was residing in the U.S. unlawfully, though they did not disclose which defendant.

The case underscores the increasingly high-stakes competition between the United States and China over artificial intelligence technologies. With semiconductors at the center of global innovation, U.S. authorities have been tightening restrictions to prevent strategic technologies from ending up in the hands of foreign adversaries.

Both defendants are expected to appear in federal court in the coming weeks as the investigation continues.

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