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Military版 - 自从习Core墨西哥谈话后,FBI就没再敢找老中麻烦了
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话题: lee话题: he话题: cia话题: fbi话题: his
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R********n
发帖数: 5904
1
那之前抓中国学生抓了不少,随便带个光盘就给你抓起来了。李文和算是反中国人的最
高峰吧?看来习Core说话还是管用的,毕竟是下代核心,份量不轻。
所以说麻烦不是躲得了的,不上网一样被抓。最终得看实力,抓哪国的留学生,是看国
力和外交需求来定的。
W*****2
发帖数: 1043
2
李文和的太太是正牌 CIA.
http://www.rense.com/general2/cia.htm
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rense.com
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accused Chinese Los Alamos
Lab Spy's Wife Worked
For CIA
By Dan Stober - San Jose Mercury News
http://www.sjmercury.com/premium/front/docs/cia23.htm
7-24-00
Wen Ho Lee's wife worked for the CIA when she was a secretary at Los Alamos National Laboratory in the 1980s, a revelation that defense attorneys will use to attack the government case against the scientist accused of betraying America's most sensitive nuclear weapons secrets.
Sylvia Lee supplied information about Chinese scientists to a CIA officer in her capacity as liaison between the lab and visiting delegations, according to congressional and intelligence officials, and people familiar with the case. Wen Ho Lee, who worked at the lab for nearly 20 years, also met with the CIA officer at least once before he and his wife visited China in 1986.
The CIA connection raises a crucial question in the case: Were Wen Ho Lee's actions the work of a spy, a naive scientist or someone gathering information for the U.S. government?
``It is at least inconsistent to ask folks to cooperate with the government and at the same time contend that what they're doing is nefarious,'' said a person familiar with the defense strategy.
Although only Lee has been charged, the FBI has made it clear that both he and his wife were under investigation. The FBI's approach, according to a 1999 congressional report, was that ``he had access to the relevant weapons data, while she had access both to him and to visiting Chinese delegations.''
Federal prosecutors have alleged that some of the Lees' interactions with the Chinese on the 1986 trip -- and at other times in China and the United States -- were conducted under suspicious circumstances, indicating the Lees might be spies.
But the new disclosures about the CIA allow the defense to claim that the Lees' dealings were known to, and possibly sanctioned by, a CIA officer. While she was mingling with the foreign scientists, the defense can argue, Sylvia Lee was feeding information about them to the CIA.
Judge will decide
Wen Ho Lee's defense team has asked U.S. District Court Judge James Parker to order the government to produce documents explaining Sylvia Lee's cooperation with the CIA. Parker agreed to read the documents in his chambers before deciding whether to disclose them to the defense.
The CIA officer -- identified by several sources as Dan Wofford -- will be unable to contradict any defense claims. He died of natural causes in the late 1990s.
The CIA connection will create more headaches for federal prosecutors already struggling to explain Wen Ho Lee's motives for downloading the weapons secrets to portable tapes, seven of which are missing. He is being held in a jail in Santa Fe, N.M., awaiting a November trial on charges that he mishandled classified data. Although he was investigated as a potential spy three separate times, beginning in 1982, he has not been charged with espionage.
To win a conviction, federal prosecutors must convince a jury that Lee took the data with the intent to harm the United States or aid another country. Lacking direct evidence, they are attempting to establish proof through circumstantial evidence of suspicious behavior, including Wen Ho Lee's contacts with the Chinese scientists.
Assistant U.S. Attorney George Stamboulidis also has expanded the field of possible motives. He has filed court papers suggesting that Lee might have taken the data to beef up his résumé as he applied for jobs in Singapore, Australia, Switzerland, France, Germany, Hong Kong and Taiwan.
Wofford's relationship with Sylvia Lee, meanwhile, has become the subject of a behind-the-scenes dispute between the CIA and FBI. The FBI has questioned whether Wofford was running an unauthorized ``rogue operation'' with Sylvia Lee; the CIA has denied it, according to officials familiar with the debate.
CIA spokeswoman Anya Guilsher said the agency would have no comment.
Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., chair of the Senate intelligence committee, was prepared to delve into the CIA's relationship with Sylvia Lee in December, after her husband was arrested. He canceled the effort at the request of FBI Director Louis Freeh, who said further hearings might interfere with the criminal case against Wen Ho Lee. Specter held hearings last year on the FBI's request for electronic surveillance of the Lees in 1997.
Wen Ho Lee's case has become one of the most closely watched and controversial national-security cases in years. His supporters, especially in the Asian-American community, have charged that Lee is being prosecuted as a scapegoat by the Clinton administration to deflect Republican charges that the administration has been lax in enforcing security at the U.S. nuclear weapons labs.
The Lees' encounters with the CIA, the FBI and the Chinese scientists began not long after they arrived at Los Alamos 20 years ago. Now 60, Wen Ho Lee was born in Taiwan. He came to the United States when he was 24, earned a doctorate in engineering from Texas A&M, became a U.S. citizen and began work at the lab in 1980. His specialty was writing computer programs that predict how plutonium behaves when compressed by high explosives during the beginning stages of a nuclear explosion.
He met his future wife in America. Four years younger than her husband, Sylvia Lee was born in Hunan province, China. She, too, became a naturalized citizen and began work at the lab in 1980 as a secretary.
It also was the same year that U.S. and Chinese nuclear weapons designers, until then strangers, began a series of lab-to-lab visits.
One of the U.S. goals was to gain a better understanding of the Chinese weapons program. Sylvia Lee became a central fixture in the relationship, translating documents, interpreting conversations and volunteering to act as host.
A go-between
``Both sides would pass messages back and forth through the Lees,'' said Robert Vrooman, the former head of counterintelligence at the lab. ``The Lees would write in Chinese and say, `Would you ask so-and-so to bring this information when he comes next week?' All this was unclassified.''
Vrooman described Sylvia Lee as sitting at the narrow part of the hourglass, with the U.S.-Chinese exchanges constantly flowing past her desk. The FBI said she ``apparently had more extensive contacts and closer relationships with these delegations than anyone else at the laboratory.''
In court documents in recent years, the FBI has described Sylvia Lee's behavior as unusual and ``aggressive.''
But her role was approved by the Los Alamos lab director and the FBI, said Vrooman. ``Some people say she inserted herself. And that is truly unfair,'' Vrooman said. ``She was asked to do it.''
Sometime during the mid-1980s Sylvia Lee's relationship with Wofford began. According to people in a position to know, she was providing the CIA with the same type of information she was giving to FBI agent Dave Bibb, the counterintelligence officer she reported to at Los Alamos: names of scientists, lists of those attending seminars, copies of documents. In CIA jargon, Sylvia Lee was a ``support asset.''
The Lees' 1986 trip to China, which Los Alamos officials approved, is an example of how the CIA issue may surface in court.
Wen Ho Lee was invited to Beijing for a conference on hydrodynamics, his specialty. It is a subject that has applications in nuclear weapons, but also in a wide variety of other fields, from weather studies to astrophysics.
On the same trip, Lee visited the Institute for Applied Physics and Computational Mathematics, the Chinese nuclear weapons lab. In an FBI interrogation of Lee last year, FBI agents put a sinister spin on the trip.
``They were good to you,'' one of the agents said to Lee. ``They took care of your family. They took you to the Great Wall. They had dinners for you. . . . You got escorted around. You got taken to museums.''
The implication was that Lee had reason to feel indebted to his hosts and perhaps felt an obligation to answer their questions about classified matters. But before their trip to China, both Lees had met with Bibb and Wofford.
Wofford apparently spoke Mandarin with the Lees; Bibb does not speak Mandarin. Recently, the FBI has questioned whether the CIA officer had been secretly using the Lees to acquire certain information on their trip.
``There's been an intense investigation about this, trying to understand the relationship,'' said a government official familiar with the situation. ``Because Wofford is dead, it's hard to get inside his head.''
Bibb, who still has an office at Los Alamos, said he could not discuss the case without the permission of the U.S. Attorney's Office. Stamboulidis did return phone calls.
In the mid-1990s -- after her role as liaison had ended -- Sylvia Lee's decade-old relationships would bring suspicion upon not just her but her husband as well.
Letter of thanks
When she gave up her role as liaison in 1989, she received a letter of thanks from lab director Siegfried Hecker. ``I want to let you know that I appreciate your efforts on behalf of our relations with our Chinese colleagues,'' Hecker wrote. ``Again, thanks for your help over the past years.''
A memo given to Sylvia Lee at the same time suggests that there was no suspicion of Sylvia Lee, but rather about ``the motives of the PRC (People's Republic of China) in cultivating her as their point-of-contact.''
Those concerns were raised another time, when Sylvia Lee, ``a secretary with no computer expertise,'' was invited to a computing seminar in China, according to George Kwei, then a manager at the lab.
_____
The Mercury News strives to avoid use of unnamed sources. When unnamed sources are used because information cannot otherwise be obtained, the newspaper generally requires more than one source to confirm the information.

【在 R********n 的大作中提到】
: 那之前抓中国学生抓了不少,随便带个光盘就给你抓起来了。李文和算是反中国人的最
: 高峰吧?看来习Core说话还是管用的,毕竟是下代核心,份量不轻。
: 所以说麻烦不是躲得了的,不上网一样被抓。最终得看实力,抓哪国的留学生,是看国
: 力和外交需求来定的。

R********n
发帖数: 5904
3
真的?领赏拿自己老公领?

【在 W*****2 的大作中提到】
: 李文和的太太是正牌 CIA.
: http://www.rense.com/general2/cia.htm
: --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
: Rense.com
: --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
: Accused Chinese Los Alamos
: Lab Spy's Wife Worked
: For CIA
: By Dan Stober - San Jose Mercury News
: http://www.sjmercury.com/premium/front/docs/cia23.htm

W*****2
发帖数: 1043
4
LOL

【在 R********n 的大作中提到】
: 真的?领赏拿自己老公领?
R********n
发帖数: 5904
5
最后丢人的还不是FBI。现在FBI很多经费和职能都由CIA和国土安全部代替了。
这种种族歧视强烈的单位,往往是不干正事的部门,就靠罗织罪名来骗人。

【在 W*****2 的大作中提到】
: LOL
k*******r
发帖数: 16963
6
我操,精彩,都说kgb用燕子如何如何,cia的燕子也很多嘛。
W*****2
发帖数: 1043
7
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wen_Ho_Lee
Wen Ho Lee
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
This is a Chinese name; the family name is Lee.
Dr. Wen Ho Lee (Chinese: 李文和; pinyin: Lǐ Wénhé; born December 21, 1939
) is a Taiwan-born Taiwanese American scientist who worked for the
University of California at the Los Alamos National Laboratory. He created
simulations of nuclear explosions for the purposes of scientific inquiry, as
well as for improving the safety and reliability of the US nuclear arsenal.
A federal grand jury indicted him of stealing secrets about U.S. nuclear
arsenal for the People's Republic of China (PRC) in December 1999.[1] After
federal investigators were unable to prove these initial accusations, the
government conducted a separate investigation and was ultimately only able
to charge Lee with improper handling of restricted data, one of the original
59 indictment counts, to which he pleaded guilty as part of a plea
settlement. In June 2006, Lee received $1.6 million from the federal
government and five media organizations as part of a settlement of a civil
suit he had filed against them for leaking his name to the press before any
formal charges had been filed against him.[2] Federal judge James A. Parker
eventually apologized to Lee for denying him bail and putting him in
solitary, and excoriated the government for misconduct and
misrepresentations to the court.[3]
Contents
[hide]
1 Early life
2 Graduate education and career
3 Personal life
4 Government investigation
4.1 Operation Kindred Spirit
5 Plays and films
6 See also
7 References
8 Further reading
[edit] Early life
Lee was born in 1939 in Nantou, Taiwan. He graduated from Keelung High
School in the northern part of the island in 1959, after which he attended
National Cheng Kung University in Tainan, Taiwan, where he graduated with a
bachelor's of science in mechanical engineering in 1963.[4] In "My Country
Versus Me", he describes life as being harsh. His father died when Lee was
very young. His mother suffered from asthma and eventually committed suicide
so that she would not 'burden' the family. He was a young boy in Taiwan
when Chiang Kai-shek's forces put down a communist-instigated insurgency.
Taiwan was placed under martial law; his brother died when he was a
conscript and his commanding officers allegedly wouldn't allow him to take
medicine. Lee, however, overcame these odds. He had what he describes as a
wonderful teacher in the 6th grade who encouraged his intellectual abilities
. His relatives did too. Eventually he made his way to university, where he
became enamored of fluid dynamics and their beautiful mathematics.
[edit] Graduate education and career
Lee came to the United States in 1965 to continue his studies in mechanical
engineering at Texas A&M University. He received his doctorate in 1969 and
became a U.S. citizen in 1974.[4] He was employed at industrial and
government research firms before he moved to New Mexico in 1978. He worked
as a scientist in weapons design at Los Alamos National Laboratory in
applied mathematics and fluid dynamics from that year until 1999. He created
simulation programs for nuclear explosions, which were used to gain
scientific understanding and help maintain the safety and reliability of the
US nuclear weapons arsenal.
[edit] Personal life
Lee is married and has two grown children. In his book, My Country Versus Me
, he describes his love of classical music (before 1911, he says, the year
Mahler died), literature, poetry, fishing in the mountains of New Mexico,
and his dedication to organic gardening.
Lee won a $1.6 million settlement from the U.S. Federal government and
several news organizations for privacy violations. He is now retired and
lives in Albuquerque, NM with his wife. He has published an applied physics
textbook that he started writing while still in prison. He has now started
to write a second physics textbook and would like to teach, but no
institutions to which he has applied have responded to his requests.[5]
[edit] Government investigation
Lee was publicly named by United States Department of Energy officials,
including then-Secretary of Energy Bill Richardson, as a suspect in the
theft of classified nuclear-related documents from Los Alamos.[6] Richardson
was criticized by the Senate for his handling of the espionage inquiry by
not testifying in front of Congress sooner. Richardson justified his
response by saying that he was waiting to uncover more information before
speaking to Congress.[7]
Lee was indicted on 59 counts, jailed in solitary confinement for nine
months, and released on time served after the government's case against him
could not be proven.[6] He was ultimately charged with only one count of
mishandling sensitive documents that did not require pre-trial solitary
confinement, while the other 58 counts were dropped.
President Bill Clinton issued a public apology to Lee over his treatment by
the federal government during the investigation.[6] Lee filed a lawsuit to
gain the names of public officials who had leaked his name to journalists
before charges had been filed against him.[6] It raised issues similar to
those in the Valerie Plame affair, of whether journalists should have to
reveal their anonymous sources in a court of law.[6] Lee's lawsuit was
settled by the federal government in 2006 just before the Supreme Court was
set to decide whether to hear the case.[6] The federal judge who heard the
case during an earlier appeal said that "top decision makers in the
executive branch" "have embarrassed our entire nation and each of us who is
a citizen."[6]
[edit] Operation Kindred Spirit
An investigation of Lee found that he had been invited to China to speak
with scientists on two occasions in the 1980s. During the investigation, and
after being confronted with questions about his actions and behavior, Lee
reported that he had been approached ten years earlier on his second visit
to China by two scientists who requested that he assist them and China with
the development of nuclear missiles. Lee further admitted that he failed to
report this contact and approach by individuals requesting classified
information as required by security regulations.
The examination of Lee's computer determined that he had taken classified
work documents, deleted the security classification headers, and then
transferred these files from a system used for processing classified data
onto another protected but unclassified network. After the FBI discovered
Lee's transfer, they revoked his badge access and clearance, including his
ability to access the data from the unclassified but secure network. Lee
then requested from a colleague in another part of Los Alamos that he be
allowed to use his computer, at which time he transferred the data to a
third unclassified computer network. FBI analysts later examined the
unclassified computer and noted that the files that Lee had transferred had
been accessed from a computer at the Student Union of the University of
California at Los Angeles (UCLA) on over forty occasions. Because of the
vast number of users who used the computers at the UCLA Student Union and
the lack of logs of users, the FBI was unable to determine which entity
gained access to the Los Alamos data.
On December 23, 1998, Lee was given a polygraph test by the FBI. He was not
told of the reason why, other than that it involved his latest trip to China
to escort his nephew. He was told that he passed the test, but was stripped
of his Q (classified) clearance in the LANL's classified section. Although
he questioned the action against him, Lee followed along, deleting the
classified information he held on his computers and moved to the T (
unclassified) clearance zone. He was later subjected to three more polygraph
tests before being told that re-evaluation of the test results showed that
Lee had failed all of them.
Wen Ho Lee pleaded guilty to one felony count of "retention" of "national
defense information". In return, the government released him from jail and
dropped the other 58 counts against him. Judge James A. Parker offered an
apology to Lee for denying him bail, and he excoriated the government for
what he called "abuse of power" in its prosecution of its case.[8] Later,
President Bill Clinton remarked that he had been "troubled" by the way Lee
was treated.
Initially, government attorneys said Lee had stolen the "crown jewels" of U.
S. nuclear weaponry science and intended to turn them over to a foreign
power. But the government was eventually forced to acknowledge that the
material was marked "restricted" rather than classified "top secret" and
that "99 percent" of the material was already available to the public.
[edit] Plays and films
The 2001 play "The Legacy Codes", by American playwright Cherylene Lee,
deals with the Wen Ho Lee case.[9]
The 2007 play Yellow Face by Asian-American playwright David Henry Hwang
places this incident in context to a greater number of cases dealing with
racial profiling against Asians, particularly the Chinese during the 1980s.
The 2010 short film The Profile,[10] by American film maker Ray Arthur Wang,
is inspired by the Wen Ho Lee case.[11]
[edit] See also

【在 k*******r 的大作中提到】
: 我操,精彩,都说kgb用燕子如何如何,cia的燕子也很多嘛。
R********n
发帖数: 5904
8
精彩。这种台妹肯定背着李文和外发过。
这个台巴子真可怜,呵呵。不知道李文和是不是也曾给FBI检举过其他大陆留学生支持
穆斯林?也曾指摘过大陆人上香港地铁吃东西?lol,那就是更妙了。

----
------
----
------

【在 W*****2 的大作中提到】
: 李文和的太太是正牌 CIA.
: http://www.rense.com/general2/cia.htm
: --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
: Rense.com
: --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
: Accused Chinese Los Alamos
: Lab Spy's Wife Worked
: For CIA
: By Dan Stober - San Jose Mercury News
: http://www.sjmercury.com/premium/front/docs/cia23.htm

1 (共1页)
进入Military版参与讨论
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李文和过去有,现在有,将来还会有维基解密李光耀对习太子的评价很高啊
我最近在自费调查肯尼迪被刺杀一案最近被棒子恶心了一下
Anybody's watching American Idol now?纽约议员craigslist找女人被告发
相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: lee话题: he话题: cia话题: fbi话题: his