Prosecutor emphasized seriousness of the man’s conduct, calling him the ‘right hand man’ in a plot to advance Beijing’s transnational repression campaign.
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y.—U.S. District Judge Nelson S. Roman on Sept. 26 sentenced one of the conspirators who helped advance Beijing’s transnational repression campaign in the United States to 16 months in prison.
Lin had worked alongside U.S. citizen John Chen, 70, under the direction of a Chinese Communist Party (CCP) official to revoke the nonprofit status of New York-based Shen Yun Performing Arts. The two had attempted to bribe the IRS with $50,000 to achieve the goal.
At the sentencing hearing, Lin expressed remorse and distanced himself from Chen, a local Chinese community leader who repeatedly communicated with a Chinese official during the repression campaign.
“I’m sorry about this conduct,” Lin said at Thursday’s hearing at the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. “No matter whether it was conscious or unconscious, wrong is wrong.”
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Chen had tried to bribe a Treasury Department law enforcement officer he had believed to be an IRS agent to advance a defective whistleblower complaint.
Lin and Chen attempted to “manipulate the IRS Whistleblower Program, through bribery and deceit,” in an attempt to strip Shen Yun Performing Arts, which is run and maintained by Falun Gong practitioners, of its tax-exempt status, according to court filings.
Damian Williams, U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, noted in a Sept. 19 sentencing memo that the Chinese communist regime considers Falun Gong practitioners to be “one of the top five threats to its rule,” and as a result, they face “a range of repressive and punitive measures.”
Chen and Lin’s conduct was part of the repression to “harass, intimidate, disrupt, and otherwise repress practitioners of Falun Gong,” he said.
“Efforts such as this to repress free speech by targeting critics of the PRC in the United States will not be tolerated. This Office remains committed to thwarting malicious transnational repression attempts by foreign influences on American soil,” Williams said in a July 25 statement.
“While we worked together, I found that Chen works for important figures in the Chinese government and businesses,” Lin said, adding that he was sometimes looped into the conversations between Chen and people based in China who expressed a desire to “harm Falun Gong.”
He acknowledged having paid $4,000 in cash to the undercover agent at New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport.
The money was part of a down payment promised to the agent for helping move the complaint forward.
Chen had told the undercover agent, who already received $1,000, that Lin would make two more trips to New York to deliver two additional cash payments of $25,000, according to the Sept. 19 sentencing memo.
Chen said that the Chinese leadership was “very generous,” according to court filings.
Prosecutors on Sept. 26 emphasized the seriousness of Lin’s conduct before the judge announced sentencing, describing Lin as the “right-hand man” in an “outrageous scheme” at the “behest of CCP.”