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Quan-Sheng Shu, a 68-year-old resident of
Kiln Creek pleaded guilty to three counts brought against him as part of a plea
bargain with a U.S. District Court in Norfolk.
Mr. Shu faces up to 25 years in prison and
fines up to $2.25 million at his April 7 sentencing.
The plea deal involved Mr. Shu providing
investigators with information about his own and others’ involvement in the
matter. It’s also the reason why the sentencing comes so late, as government
investigators are gathering all available info about the case.
"It's an ongoing investigation," said Assistant U.S. Attorney Alan M.
Salsbury. He did not say if others may be arrested in connection with the
issue.
Shu is on American soil since 1983 and a
naturalized citizen since 1998. He runs a small business called AMAC
international in the Applied Research Center on Jefferson
Avenue. He started
establishing relations between American and European companies in China in
2002.
The FBI is silent on how it first got wind
of Shu’s misdealing, but they started surveillance on him in 2007.
Monday Shu pleaded guilty to charges of:
exporting a defense service without a license, by helping the Chinese convert
hydrogen gas to liquid for rockets; exporting a defense product the same way,
as he prided technical data and drawings about tanks for said hydrogen and
misc. equipment; and finally bribing a foreign official (Chinese) to ensure
they favored a French firm consulted by Shu.
The first two counts are each punishable by
up to 10 years in prison and fines up to $1 million. The third nets him up to 5
years and/or $250,000. Shu earned $387,000 from winning the French firm’s
contract.
U.S. District Judge Henry C. Morgan Jr.
accepted Shu’s guilty plea on Monday and will sentence him after the
investigation concludes.
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