Current:Home > ContactEx-CIA officer who spied for China faces prison time -- and a lifetime of polygraph tests -FundPrime
Ex-CIA officer who spied for China faces prison time -- and a lifetime of polygraph tests
View
Date:2025-04-15 08:23:07
HONOLULU (AP) — A former CIA officer and contract linguist for the FBI who received cash, golf clubs and other expensive gifts in exchange for spying for China faces a decade in prison if a U.S. judge approves his plea agreement Wednesday.
Alexander Yuk Ching Ma, 71, made a deal in May with federal prosecutors, who agreed to recommend the 10-year term in exchange for his guilty plea to a count of conspiracy to gather or deliver national defense information to a foreign government. The deal also requires him to submit to polygraph tests, whenever requested by the U.S. government, for the rest of his life.
“I hope God and America will forgive me for what I have done,” Ma, who has been in custody since his 2020 arrest, wrote in a letter to Chief U.S. District Judge Derrick Watson in Honolulu ahead of his sentencing.
Without the deal, Ma faced up to life in prison. He is allowed to withdraw from the agreement if Watson rejects the 10-year sentence.
Ma was born in Hong Kong, moved to Honolulu in 1968 and became a U.S. citizen in 1975. He joined the CIA in 1982, was assigned overseas the following year, and resigned in 1989. He held a top secret security clearance, according to court documents.
Ma lived and worked in Shanghai, China, before returning to Hawaii in 2001, and at the behest of Chinese intelligence officers, he agreed to arrange an introduction between officers of the Shanghai State Security Bureau and his older brother — who had also served as a CIA case officer.
During a three-day meeting in a Hong Kong hotel room that year, Ma’s brother — identified in the plea agreement as “Co-conspirator #1” — provided the intelligence officers a “large volume of classified and sensitive information,” according to the document. They were paid $50,000; prosecutors said they had an hourlong video from the meeting that showed Ma counting the money.
Two years later, Ma applied for a job as a contract linguist in the FBI’s Honolulu field office. By then, the Americans knew he was collaborating with Chinese intelligence officers, and they hired him in 2004 so they could keep an eye on his espionage activities.
Over the following six years, he regularly copied, photographed and stole classified documents, prosecutors said. He often took them on trips to China, returning with thousands of dollars in cash and expensive gifts, including a new set of golf clubs, prosecutors said.
At one point in 2006, his handlers at the Shanghai State Security Bureau asked Ma to get his brother to help identify four people in photographs, and the brother did identify two of them.
During a sting operation, Ma accepted thousands of dollars in cash in exchange for past espionage activities, and he told an undercover FBI agent posing as a Chinese intelligence officer that he wanted to see the “motherland” succeed, prosecutors have said.
The brother was never prosecuted. He suffered from debilitating symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease and has since died, court documents say.
“Because of my brother, I could not bring myself to report this crime,” Ma said in his letter to the judge. “He was like a father figure to me. In a way, I am also glad that he left this world, as that made me free to admit what I did.”
The plea agreement also called for Ma to cooperate with the U.S. government by providing more details about his case and submitting to polygraph tests for the rest of his life.
Prosecutors said that since pleading guilty, Ma has already taken part in five “lengthy, and sometimes grueling, sessions over the course of four weeks, some spanning as long as six hours, wherein he provided valuable information and endeavored to answer the government’s inquiries to the best of his ability.”
veryGood! (41359)
Related
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Pruitt’s Anti-Climate Agenda Is Facing New Challenge From Science Advisers
- An art exhibit on the National Mall honors health care workers who died of COVID
- Daily meditation may work as well as a popular drug to calm anxiety, study finds
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Dozens of Countries Take Aim at Climate Super Pollutants
- Feds Pour Millions into Innovative Energy Storage Projects in New York
- The rate of alcohol-related deaths in the U.S. rose 30% in the first year of COVID
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- A cell biologist shares the wonder of researching life's most fundamental form
Ranking
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- California voters enshrine right to abortion and contraception in state constitution
- Food insecurity is driving women in Africa into sex work, increasing HIV risk
- With one dose, new drug may cure sleeping sickness. Could it also wipe it out?
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- White House: Raising Coal Royalties a Boon for Taxpayers, and for the Climate
- InsideClimate News to Host 2019 Investigative Journalism Fellow
- A Deeply Personal Race Against A Fatal Brain Disease
Recommendation
Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
Sofia Richie Proves She's Still in Bridal Mode With Her Head-Turning White Look
Beijing adds new COVID quarantine centers, sparking panic buying
Why China's 'zero COVID' policy is finally faltering
At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
Wimbledon will allow women to wear colored undershorts, in nod to period concerns
Today’s Climate: August 5, 2010
Trump: America First on Fossil Fuels, Last on Climate Change