logo
China imposes exit bans on U.S. Department of Commerce employee and a Wells Fargo banker

China imposes exit bans on U.S. Department of Commerce employee and a Wells Fargo banker

CBS News2 days ago
A U.S. Department of Commerce employee has been restricted from leaving China by authorities in Beijing, a State Department spokesperson told CBS News on Monday. The unidentified government employee's restricted travel was confirmed as Beijing revealed new information about a U.S.-based Wells Fargo banker who has also been subjected to an exit ban.
"We can confirm that a U.S. Patent and Trademark Office employee, while traveling to China in a personal capacity, was made subject to an exit ban in China," the State Department spokesperson said Monday. "We are tracking this case very closely and are engaged with Chinese officials to resolve the situation as quickly as possible."
The New York Times reported Monday that the employee in question is a U.S. citizen who has been prevented from leaving China since mid-April. The newspaper cited a State Department document it has obtained, adding that it shows Beijing officials seized the man's passport, credit card, cellphone and iPad while he was in the city of Chengdu on April 14.
The Times said, citing the document, that the man's documents were returned on April 22, but that he was told he could not leave the country.
At a news conference on Monday, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson declined to comment on the case of the Department of Commerce employee beyond saying that Beijing "upholds the rule of law and handles entry and exit affairs in accordance with the law."
But Foreign Ministry spokesperson Guo Jiaku did confirm that Wells Fargo banker Mao Chenyue has been restricted from leaving China and is facing criminal charges.
"Ms. Mao Chenyue is involved in a criminal case currently being handled by Chinese law-enforcement authorities and is subjected to exit restrictions in accordance with the law. Pursuant to Chinese laws, with the case still under investigation, Ms. Mao cannot leave the country for the time being and has an obligation to cooperate with the investigation," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Guo Jiaku said Monday.
Chenyue is a Managing Director at Wells Fargo and is based in Atlanta, according to her Linkedin profile. Her Linkedin account also says she is bilingual in English and Chinese.
Mao leads Wells Fargo's international factoring business and was born in Shanghai, according to a June press release on the website of the non profit FCI, a global network of companies that provides factoring services.
It was not clear on Tuesday whether Mao holds dual Chinese and U.S. nationality.
A Wells Fargo representative told CBS News in a statement on Monday that the company was "closely tracking this situation and working through the appropriate channels so our employee can return to the United States as soon as possible."
A U.S. State Department spokesperson declined to comment Monday on Chenyue's status, "due to privacy and other considerations," but said the State Department "has no higher priority than the safety and security of American citizens."
On its website, the State Department urges Americans travelling in China to "exercise increased caution," warning that China "arbitrarily enforces local laws, including exit bans on U.S. citizens and citizens of other countries, without fair and transparent process under the law."
U.S. citizens may only realize they have been subjected to an exit ban when they attempt to leave China, and there may be no available legal recourse to appeal such a ban via a Chinese court, according to the State Department's travel advisory.
The Chinese government also does not recognize dual nationality, meaning "U.S. citizens of Chinese descent may be subject to additional scrutiny and harassment," the guidance on the State Department's website says.
The latest incidents come at a sensitive time in relations between Beijing and Washington. In late June, the White House and officials in Beijing said the two sides had agreed on the framework of a new deal to end a trade war between the world's two largest economies.
As it stands, China faces an August 12 deadline — imposed by President Trump — to strike a new trade deal with the U.S. to end an escalating tit-for-tat trade tariff war that the countries have engaged in since Mr. Trump returned to the White House in January.
Mr. Trump imposed tariffs of up to 145% on imports from China, and Beijing responded with its own steep import duties, but the two sides agreed to a truce to allow for negotiations. In the meantime, the Trump administration has imposed 30% tariffs on imports from China, pending the August 12 deadline, when much higher rates will be imposed by both Washington and Beijing if no agreement is reached.
The standoff has increased the risks for American companies doing business in China that had already been mounting for several years.
In June 2023, after Chinese authorities raided the offices of several U.S.-based firms, Beijing-based business lawyer James Zimmerman told CBS News it seemed everything was being taken by the Communist Party as a potential threat.
"Unfortunately, in that kind of environment it's very difficult to operate — when everything is viewed as a national security matter and… it looks as if…. anything you do could be considered to be spying," he said.Olivia Victoria Gazis
contributed to this report.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nvidia AI chips worth $1B smuggled into China after Trump imposed US export controls: report
Nvidia AI chips worth $1B smuggled into China after Trump imposed US export controls: report

New York Post

time16 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Nvidia AI chips worth $1B smuggled into China after Trump imposed US export controls: report

At least $1 billion in Nvidia computer chips were smuggled into China in the three-months span after President Trump imposed export controls on the cutting-edge chips, according to a bombshell report Thursday. Nvidia's powerful B200 chip – favored by US tech giants like OpenAI and Google to power their artificial intelligence models – are banned for sale to China due to government rules limiting shipments for chips that exceed certain performance thresholds. However, the chip was still being sold in May by Chinese suppliers to data center operators that support China-based tech firms, the Financial Times reported, citing an analysis of sales contracts, company filings and interviews with sources with direct knowledge of the deals. Advertisement 3 Nvidia's most powerful chips are banned for sale to China. REUTERS 'Export controls will not prevent the most advanced Nvidia products from entering China,' a Chinese data center operator told the FT. 'What it creates is just inefficiency and huge profits for the risk-taking middle men.' In May, the Trump administration had banned Nvidia from selling less-powerful H20 chips that were specifically built by the company to adhere to previous export controls imposed on their more powerful chips during the Biden administration. Advertisement However, Nvidia boss Jensen Huang revealed last week that Trump had reversed course and would allow H20 chips to be sold in China. Critics have argued that China-based companies were circumventing the export controls to acquire Nvidia's hardware. That speculation surged earlier this year after reports that China-based AI firm DeepSeek had a greater supply of Nvidia chips than it publicly admitted. 3 Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang recently revealed that Trump had lifted restrictions on H20 sales to China. Getty Images The FT said it reviewed evidence that Chinese distributors in the Guangdong, Zhejiang and Anhui provinces had sold Nvidia's B200 and other restricted chips such as the H100 and H200. Advertisement The FT said there was no evidence that Nvidia had any involvement or knowledge of illicit chip sales to Chinese entities. The company has long said that it complies with all US laws on chip technology. 3 Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang is pictured. REUTERS 'Trying to cobble together data centers from smuggled products is a losing proposition, both technically and economically,' Nvidia said in a statement. 'Data centers require service and support, which we provide only to authorized Nvidia products.' Advertisement Last month, the chip supplier became the first public company in history to surpass a $4 trillion market valuation.

How Hackers Targeted Microsoft in Global Cyberattack
How Hackers Targeted Microsoft in Global Cyberattack

Bloomberg

time17 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

How Hackers Targeted Microsoft in Global Cyberattack

Hackers in recent weeks have exploited flaws in SharePoint, a document management system developed by Microsoft Corp., to try to steal sensitive data from hundreds of victims. On July 22, Microsoft accused hackers associated with the Chinese government of breaking into computer systems belonging to businesses and government agencies in the US and around the world. The list of known victims includes the Department of Education and the National Nuclear Security Administration, the US agency charged with safeguarding the country's nuclear weapons, Bloomberg reported.

Single US Water Utility Receives 6 Million China-Based Connection Attempts in 1 Week: Security Report
Single US Water Utility Receives 6 Million China-Based Connection Attempts in 1 Week: Security Report

Epoch Times

time18 minutes ago

  • Epoch Times

Single US Water Utility Receives 6 Million China-Based Connection Attempts in 1 Week: Security Report

A single water utility in California has received more than 6 million hits from China-based addresses within a week, pointing to the Chinese communist regime's ongoing efforts to scan for U.S. critical infrastructure vulnerabilities, according to security experts. The South Coast Water District (SCWD) blocked these connection attempts between July 15 and July 23.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store