
US charges two Chinese nationals with attempting to recruit US service members
The suspects facilitated a "dead-drop payment" of at least $10,000 in a locker at a recreational facility in Northern California in 2022 in exchange for U.S. national security information that had already been passed to Chinese intelligence, the Justice Department said.
Yuance Chen, 38, a legal permanent resident living in Happy Valley, Oregon, and Liren 'Ryan' Lai, 39, who arrived in Houston from China in April on a tourist visa, were arrested on Friday, the department said in a statement.
The pair worked on behalf of China's Ministry of State Security and made their initial appearances in federal court in Houston and Portland, Oregon on Monday, it said.
The Justice Department gave no details on who provided the national security information or the military members targeted for recruitment.
After the 2022 incident, the pair "continued to work on behalf of the MSS, including to help identify potential assets for MSS recruitment within the ranks of the U.S. Navy," the Justice Department said.
"The Chinese Communist Party thought they were getting away with their scheme to operate on U.S. soil, utilizing spy craft, like dead drops, to pay their sources," FBI Director Kash Patel said in a statement.
In a statement to Reuters, Chinese Embassy spokesperson Liu Pengyu said he was not aware of the specific case but said the allegations were "assumptions and speculations," accusing the U.S. of hypocrisy in its global intelligence operations.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
26 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
'Predator' teacher, 30, makes jaw-dropping claim as she is accused of 'raping boy 50 times and sent damning text messages'
An ousted special education teacher who allegedly raped a former student has blamed the accusation on being 'good looking' and now claims she is the victim of misogyny. Christina Formella, 30, has long denied allegations that she engaged in an inappropriate relationship with the unidentified teenage student, whom prosecutors say she sent explicit text messages and raped more than 50 times. She is now facing a total of 55 criminal charges, including criminal sexual assault, aggravated criminal sexual abuse, indecent solicitation of a child and grooming. But Formella's family is now claiming she is just the victim of 'sexist scrutiny,' the New York Post reports. 'It's a spectacle - a public ritual that publishes women not for what they've done, but for how they're perceived,' a representative for the family told the outlet. 'When men face accusations, we discuss evidence and procedure. When women face accusations, we attack their character, their choices and their worth as human beings,' the family rep continued. 'This isn't justice - it's gender-based persecution disguised as accountability.' The representative for the family went on to explain that the 'public discourse' around Formella's case focuses on her 'appearance, her private life [and] even her lipstick - as if those details bear on guilt or innocence.' He also hit out at 'Internet caricatures' that call Formella a '"predator," "unfaithful wife" [and] "hypocrite,"' and claimed the coverage of the former teacher and soccer coach's alleged crimes have turned into 'real-world stalking' by 'so-called content creators.' Formella was even once followed to church, 'violating the sanctity of worship and terrorizing her family,' the representative said. 'Christina's case isn't being "covered" - she's being hunted,' he continued in a statement, adding that Formella has become the victim of 'bullying.' 'Reckless speculation, misinformation and theatrical coverage do nothing to serve justice and set hard-won respect for women back decades,' the representative concluded. Prosecutors have said Formella began an illicit relationship with the boy when he was just 14 years old and a member of the soccer team she coached at Downers Grove South High School. Formella had taken it upon herself to privately tutor the teen before class after an injury sidelined him. But prosecutors say the arrangement became more sinister when the special education teacher started sending the teenager flirtatious messages using the school's messaging system. Their exchanges eventually moved to text, with the alleged pedophile at one point telling the teen she 'loved' him and that he was 'perfect,' according to messages previously revealed in court. The relationship then allegedly turned physical inside her classroom in December 2023, when she was 28 and the boy was 15. The allegations first came to light in March, after the boy's mother stumbled upon the text messages on his phone, including one in which Formella allegedly wrote: 'I love having sex with you'. DuPage County prosecutors had initially believed the sordid affair culminated in a single sexual encounter following months of their inappropriate messages. But they say further evidence revealed the pair had sex more than 50 times, most of the time in her classroom but also multiple times at the home she shared with her unsuspecting husband, Michael. Formella even allegedly kept a 'memoir' on her phone during the relationship. 'I warned you that we should never have started dating a long long long fking time ago and you gas lit me and convinced me it was fine,' she allegedly said of the teen boy. 'We WILL be in each other's lives forever. We will be able to love each other while also living our own lives,' the diary added. Formella later claimed the writings were part of a therapeutic journaling exercise, and insisted that any sexual references in the entries were about her husband. Yet in a message to the boy, prosecutors say, Formella said she planned to dump her husband and abscond with his family's vast fortune. The couple had tied the knot last year, just weeks before her alleged sordid affair with the teen reportedly fizzled out in September. When the allegations of Formella's relationship then emerged earlier this year, Michael said he was left 'completely blindsided' by the allegations and swore he had no clue his wife was allegedly abusing an underage boy - despite their sexual activities at his house and his wife allegedly texting the teen while they were vacationing in Italy. Still, Michael has been by his wife's side at court hearings, as has his father, Randy Formella. They were even pictured supporting Formella when she appeared in court earlier this week to brazenly ask a judge to slash the distance she must keep from the alleged victim. She has been required to keep a 5,000-foot buffer zone from the boy since her charges were upgraded last month. That meant that she had to leave her marital home, and Christina has been holed up at her parents' $560,000 home on a golf course ever since. But in a bold request on Wednesday, she asked the court to slash that distance in half to just 2,500 feet, arguing the boy often hangs out with friends near her house and even has a job in the area. Judge Mia McPherson ultimately rejected her argument and denied the motion.


Reuters
34 minutes ago
- Reuters
Gold heads for weekly gain as US tax-cut bill stokes fiscal worries
July 4 (Reuters) - Gold edged up on Friday, poised for a weekly gain as U.S. President Donald Trump's tax-cut and spending bill passed in Congress, raising fiscal concerns. Spot gold rose 0.1% to $3,329.67 per ounce, as of 0221 GMT. Bullion is up 1.7% this week. U.S. gold futures inched down 0.1% at $3,339.30. Trump's tax-cut legislation cleared its final hurdle in the U.S. Congress on Thursday, which will fund his immigration crackdown, make his 2017 tax cuts permanent and deliver new tax breaks that he promised during his 2024 campaign. Through this bill "we're not making any progress on getting our fiscal house in order here in the U.S., so in longer run, it should be bearish for the dollar and bullish for gold," Marex analyst Edward Meir said. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimates the legislation would add $3.4 trillion over a decade to the nation's $36.2 trillion debt. Meanwhile, the labor market data on Thursday showed U.S. firms added a more-than-expected 147,000 jobs in June and the unemployment rate unexpectedly fell to 4.1%, bolstering the case for the Federal Reserve to hold interest rates steady. Trump announced that letters specifying tariff rates on imports would begin being sent out Friday, signaling a shift from earlier pledges to negotiate individual trade deals. "If Trump is very insistent on July 9 being a drop-dead date and he imposes these tariffs again, the dollar will certainly weaken and we could see gold moving higher," Meir said. On April 2, Trump announced reciprocal tariffs of 10%-50%, later reducing most rates to 10% until July 9 to allow for negotiations. Non-yielding bullion, considered a safe-haven asset during geopolitical and economic uncertainties, tends to perform well in a low-interest-rate environment. Spot silver fell 0.5% to $36.66 per ounce, platinum rose 0.7% to $1,376.67 and palladium fell 0.6% to $1,130.60.


Sky News
an hour ago
- Sky News
Stars, stripes and soundbites: Trump celebrates his 'big, beautiful' win
Why you can trust Sky News It couldn't have been more American. Stars, stripes and soundbites at the Iowa State Fairground on the eve of the fourth of July. The stars had aligned for President Trump, celebrating the passage of his signature tax and spending bill. "There can be no better birthday for America than the phenomenal victory we achieved just hours ago when Congress passed the big, beautiful bill to make America great again," he told the crowd at Des Moines. In recent weeks, his administration has earned its stripes, chalking up unexpected successes: an Israel/Iran ceasefire, agreement at NATO and a legislative breakthrough. It was a small margin - 218 votes to 214 - but a huge win for Donald Trump because the wide-ranging legislation effectively bankrolls his second-term agenda. He feels invincible right now, even joking when a bang interrupted his Iowa speech. "Don't worry, it's only fireworks, I hope. Famous last words… You always have to think positive. I didn't like the sound of that either," he laughed. Democrats have branded the bill "the big, ugly betrayal", claiming 11 million lower-income Americans will lose their healthcare to fund Trump's tax cuts and spending priorities. 👉 Follow Trump100 on your podcast app 👈 Their leader in the House, Hakeem Jeffries, vowed to "press on for democracy" in a record-breaking speech lasting eight hours and 11 minutes. But the Democrats will struggle to press on anywhere until they find a leader and a coherent opposition strategy to rally around. Republican representatives greeted the result with chants of "USA, USA", but their ownership of the bill makes them accountable for its impact. How Donald Trump handles this degree of power will define this presidency.