logo
Shen Yun is said to be under federal investigation over possible visa fraud

Shen Yun is said to be under federal investigation over possible visa fraud

Boston Globe06-02-2025

Last year, a New York Times investigation revealed that the dance group has exploited its young performers, typically the children of Falun Gong followers, by paying them little or nothing to work long hours and keep grueling schedules.
Advertisement
New York regulators have separately begun an inquiry into whether the group has complied with state labor law, and a former performer has filed a lawsuit accusing Shen Yun of forced labor and human trafficking.
Get Starting Point
A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.
Enter Email
Sign Up
The agents conducting the federal criminal investigation have also sought information about Shen Yun's financial and labor practices, including whether performers were directed to smuggle cash into the United States when returning from tours overseas, according to people with knowledge of the matter, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss an ongoing inquiry.
Ying Chen, a representative of Shen Yun, said the group had yet to hear from federal authorities but would 'cooperate fully' if contacted.
'We operate with integrity and remain committed to upholding the highest artistic and ethical standards,' she wrote, adding that the group was dedicated to complying with 'all applicable laws.'
Spokespeople for the Department of Homeland Security, the State Department and the US attorney's office in Manhattan all declined to comment.
Known for its ubiquitous advertising, Shen Yun stages hundreds of performances a year around the world. Its music and dance pieces deliver the anti-communist message of Falun Gong, which has been banned by the Chinese government, and the spiritual teachings of Li Hongzhi, the religious movement's founder and leader.
Many of Shen Yun's performers have joined the group in New York while on student visas from Taiwan, Canada, Australia and elsewhere. Their training is overseen by Li himself, who is in his early 70s and is viewed by many Falun Gong followers as the creator of the universe.
Advertisement
Falun Gong's headquarters in Cuddebackville, New York, includes a boarding school and college where Shen Yun's performers can live and study.
The criminal inquiry, which has been in progress since at least 2023, has focused in part on whether Shen Yun's leaders arranged romantic relationships for its performers, according to people with knowledge of the matter.
The Times reported in August that Shen Yun's leaders have tried to set up foreign students with US citizens in relationships that some former performers believed were for visa purposes.
Male and female performers in Shen Yun were not supposed to speak to one another unless it was necessary for work, and dating required permission from Shen Yun's leaders, according to interviews with former performers. Violators of these rules could face public shaming during group critique sessions — or expulsion from the group, former performers said.
In her statement, Chen wrote, 'Falun Gong practitioners take the institution of marriage seriously, and any allegation otherwise is false. All marriages within our community are genuine.'
Aside from asking about visas, federal investigators have also interviewed former Shen Yun performers and others about their working and living conditions, including their hours and compensation, according to people with knowledge of the matter.
The investigators were examining whether performers could come and go freely from the group's guarded compound northwest of New York City and whether their passports were confiscated when they joined Shen Yun. They were also investigating the nature and quality of the education provided by Shen Yun's training schools, some of the people said.
Advertisement
Chen said that Shen Yun's student performers receive full scholarships and are provided with a 'modern education in all of the academic subjects that will prepare them for college but also in traditional Chinese beliefs and values.'
She said the group holds on to students' passports for safekeeping, 'but we always return the passports when requested.'
Representatives of Shen Yun and Falun Gong have said that state and federal labor laws do not apply to their student performers because they are receiving a learning opportunity, not working as employees. They have often sought to cast their critics, including former members of Shen Yun, as pawns of the Chinese government, which has persecuted Falun Gong followers for almost three decades.
In her most recent statement, Chen said again that the Chinese Communist Party was driving a campaign to sabotage Shen Yun.
'In addition to such legal attacks,' she said, 'Shen Yun receives multiple threats every month of bombings, mass shootings and threats to rape and kill our female performers.'
The investigation, which initially involved the State Department's Diplomatic Security Service, expanded in recent months to include agents from Homeland Security Investigations, which conducts criminal inquiries into the illegal movement of people, goods and money into and out of the United States.
Few businesses run by Falun Gong are more important to the movement than Shen Yun. A huge moneymaker, the dance group reported $266 million in assets at the end of 2023, its most recent tax filing showed, with nearly all of that kept in cash and other liquid instruments.
Its current world tour began in December and is scheduled to travel to five continents, ending in May.
Advertisement
In interviews with the Times, former performers said they had been discouraged from seeking medical treatment for injuries and had endured years of emotional abuse and manipulation by Shen Yun leaders who wanted them to stay in the group and keep performing.
The Times has also reported that Shen Yun asked young performers to sneak cash into the United States — and that the group relied on free labor and financial support from Falun Gong followers, some of whom skirted federal rules to obtain $48 million in pandemic relief grants.
The federal prosecutors' office involved in the investigation, in the Southern District of New York, brought a case in June against the chief financial officer of The Epoch Times, a news outlet run by Falun Gong practitioners.
He was indicted on charges of conspiring to launder $67 million and of lying to a bank about its source — a scheme that inflated the newspaper's accounts, prosecutors said. Another Epoch Times employee has also been charged in the scheme.
They have pleaded not guilty.
The Times has reported that in 2020 and 2021, the period when prosecutors say the money laundering scheme was underway, The Epoch Times donated $16 million to Shen Yun and a school that trains its performers.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

SafeSport issues permanant ban on elite gymnastics coach in latest chapter of long-running case
SafeSport issues permanant ban on elite gymnastics coach in latest chapter of long-running case

Hamilton Spectator

time6 hours ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

SafeSport issues permanant ban on elite gymnastics coach in latest chapter of long-running case

DENVER (AP) — The gymnastics coach for a one-time Olympic alternate received a lifetime ban Thursday from the U.S. Center for SafeSport. Qi Han, whose case dates to at least 2016 and who had been under a temporary sanction for the past two years, was listed as permanently ineligible, subject to appeal, on the center's disciplinary database. It said he was found to have committed emotional misconduct, physical misconduct and violated USA Gymnastics policies and bylaws. Han, a former gymnast on the Chinese national team, and his wife, Yiwen Chen, opened Everest Gymnastics in the suburbs of Charlotte, North Carolina, in 2004. The gym quickly gained prominence within USA Gymnastics. In 2016, Han served as the coach to Olympic alternate Ashton Locklear. Locklear told The New York Times in 2018 that Han physically and emotionally abused her and at one point threw a cell phone at her. Han denied the allegations. Several other athletes who trained at Everest came forward over ensuing years, describing similar experiences with Han. As of Thursday night, Han was still listed as the co-owner and head coach at Everest. Emails sent by The Associated Press to multiple addresses at the gymnastics club were not immediately returned. Details from Han's accusers started coming out the year before the SafeSport Center opened in the wake of extensive abuse committed by former gymnastics doctor Larry Nassar. The Times reported that USA Gymnastics handed Han's case over to the center shortly after it opened in 2017. The center's interim CEO, April Holmes, portrayed the latest development as a sign the center is making sports safer. 'We know it is not easy to come forward, so we thank those who shared their stories and helped bring resolution to this case,' Holmes said. 'This outcome sends a clear message that sport culture is changing and accountability is moving the needle.' In explaining the lengthy amount of time it took to resolve the case, the center said in a statement that it involved more than 80 witnesses, thousands of pages of evidence and transcripts and allegations that span decades. The center said it stood by the fairness and thoroughness of the process but also 'remains committed to increasing efficiencies in our process to help resolve cases more quickly.' ___ AP National Writer Will Graves contributed to this report. ___ AP sports:

President Trump banned citizens of 12 countries from entering the US. Here's what to know.
President Trump banned citizens of 12 countries from entering the US. Here's what to know.

Chicago Tribune

time6 hours ago

  • Chicago Tribune

President Trump banned citizens of 12 countries from entering the US. Here's what to know.

DAKAR, Senegal — President Donald Trump has banned citizens of 12 countries from entering the United States and restricted access for those from seven others, citing national security concerns in resurrecting and expanding a hallmark policy from his first term that will mostly affect people from Africa and the Middle East. The ban announced Wednesday applies to citizens of Afghanistan, Myanmar, Chad, the Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen. The heightened restrictions apply to people from Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan and Venezuela who are outside the U.S. and don't hold a valid visa. The policy takes effect Monday at 12:01 a.m. and does not have an end date. Here's what to know about the new rules: Since returning to the White House, Trump has launched an unprecedented campaign of immigration enforcement that has pushed the limits of executive power and clashed with federal judgestrying to restrain him. The travel ban stems from a Jan. 20 executive order Trump issued requiring the Department of State, Department of Homeland Security and the Director of National Intelligence to compile a report on 'hostile attitudes' toward the U.S. The aim is to 'protect its citizens from aliens who intend to commit terrorist attacks, threaten our national security, espouse hateful ideology, or otherwise exploit the immigration laws for malevolent purposes,' the administration said. In a video posted on social media, Trump tied the new ban to a terrorist attack Sunday in Boulder, Colorado, saying it underscored the dangers posed by some visitors who overstay visas. The man charged in the attack is from Egypt, a country that is not on Trump's restricted list. U.S. officials say he overstayed a tourist visa. Trump said nationals of countries included in the ban pose 'terrorism-related' and 'public-safety' risks, as well as risks of overstaying their visas. He also said some of these countries had 'deficient' screening and vetting or have historically refused to take back their citizens. His findings rely extensively on an annual Homeland Security report about tourists, businesspeople and students who overstay U.S. visas and arrive by air or sea, singling out countries with high percentages of nationals who remain after their visas expired. 'We don't want them,' Trump said. The inclusion of Afghanistan angered some supporters who have worked to resettle its people. The ban makes exceptions for Afghans on special immigrant visas, who were generally the people who worked most closely with the U.S. government during the two-decade war there. The list can be changed, the administration said in a document, if authorities in the designated countries make 'material improvements' to their own rules and procedures. New countries can be added 'as threats emerge around the world.' Venezuela President Nicolás Maduro's government condemned the travel ban, characterizing it in a statement as a 'stigmatization and criminalization campaign' against Venezuelans, who have been targeted by the Trump administration's immigration crackdown. Chad President Mahamat Deby Itno said his country would suspend visas for U.S. citizens in response to the ban. Aid and refugee resettlement groups also denounced it. 'This policy is not about national security — it is about sowing division and vilifying communities that are seeking safety and opportunity in the United States,' said Abby Maxman, president of Oxfam America. The Council on American-Islamic Relations, the nation's largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization, called the order 'unnecessary, overbroad and ideologically motivated.' And the National Immigration Law Center said it was 'outraged' and that the ban is 'laced with unsubstantiated legal justifications.' 'The impact of this new ban will be deeply racialized, as it will effectively bar hundreds of millions of Black and Brown people from entering the United States,' the group said in a statement. But reactions to the ban ran the gamut from anger to guarded relief and support. In Haiti, radio stations received a flurry of calls Thursday from angry listeners, including many who said they were Haitians living in the U.S. and who accused Trump of being racist, noting that the people of many of the targeted countries are Black. In Miami, restaurant owner Wilkinson Sejour said most of his employees and customers are from Haiti and that the ban will hurt his business in a 'domino effect.' He suggested that Haiti was targeted because most Haitians vote Democrat. Jaylani Hussein, who heads CAIR's Minnesota chapter, said his compatriots in the Twin Cities' large Somali American community had been expecting Trump's order, but didn't know the details until its release. 'It's a lot better than maybe some of the worst fears of what we initially thought could come out. But it significantly impacts the Somali community, there's no way around it,' he said. William Lopez, a 75-year-old property investor who arrived from Cuba in 1967, supports the travel ban. 'These are people that come but don't want to work, they support the Cuban government, they support communism,' Lopez said at a restaurant near Little Havana in Miami. 'What the Trump administration is doing is perfectly good.' Early in Trump's first term, he issued an executive order banning travel to the U.S. by citizens of seven predominantly Muslim countries, including Iraq, Syria, Iran, Sudan, Libya, Somalia and Yemen. It was one of the most chaotic and confusing moments of his young presidency. Travelers from those nations were either barred from getting on flights to the U.S. or detained at U.S. airports after they landed. They included students and faculty, as well as businesspeople, tourists and people visiting friends and family. The order, often referred to as the 'Muslim ban' or the 'travel ban,' was retooled amid legal challenges until a version was upheld by the Supreme Court in 2018. The ban affected various categories of travelers and immigrants from Iran, Somalia, Yemen, Syria and Libya, plus North Koreans and some Venezuelan government officials and their families.

Chinese chemical bust by border officials underscores multifront effort by CCP to undermine US
Chinese chemical bust by border officials underscores multifront effort by CCP to undermine US

Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Chinese chemical bust by border officials underscores multifront effort by CCP to undermine US

Mexican drug cartels are getting help from the Chinese to build their drug empire that feeds off American consumers. Border patrol officials intercepted 50,000 kilos of precursor chemicals this week used in the process of manufacturing methamphetamines, sent from China and intended for members of the Sinaloa Cartel in Mexico. In addition to providing the cartels with the chemicals needed to make illicit drugs, Chinese entities are also one of the foremost actors in helping them launder their proceeds, according to the Treasury Department. "For far too long, the Mexican drug cartels have raked in billions of dollars at the expense of our local communities leaving nothing but addiction, death and despair in their wake," said Chad Plantz, Immigrations and Customs Enforcement's (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations Special Agent in Charge in Houston. "This initiative provides HSI with a game-changing method to stay one step ahead of the cartels by disrupting the flow of chemicals that they depend on to produce illicit narcotics." 'Coming For Us': Expert Sounds Alarm On Ccp's Mission To 'Kill Americans' After Fbi Makes Shocking Arrests The seizure was part of an ongoing initiative launched in 2019 to identify suspicious shipments of precursor chemicals from China, India and other countries that are destined for Mexican drug cartels. Since the initiative was established, officials have interdicted more than 1,700,000 kilograms of chemicals used to manufacture methamphetamines and fentanyl, including a seizure this past March of 44,000 kilograms of precursor chemicals at the Port of Houston, destined for the Sinaloa Cartel. Immigration officials' bust comes amid news of a spate of other incidents involving Chinese nationals or individuals working for China who have engaged in espionage efforts, ranging from agroterroism and selling military secrets, to infiltrating U.S. universities and utilizing American-based products to sow political divisions online. Read On The Fox News App In the latest incident, two Chinese nationals were charged with allegedly smuggling a "dangerous biological pathogen" into the U.S. to study at a University of Michigan laboratory. This happened amid controversy over the Trump administration's effort to intensify visa scrutiny for Chinese nationals trying to enter the United States. Chinese Official Reportedly Seeking Talks With Trump On Fentanyl Ingredients Amid Trade War Last month, an expansive investigation by a group of Stanford students detailed how there is a culture of students and faculty at their school doing work for the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). The report highlighted how some students want to work with the Chinese government, such as through sharing intellectual property or aligning their research priorities with Chinese interests, while others are sometimes coerced into doing work for the CCP, particularly if they have family back in Beijing. Meanwhile, just this week, reports of Chinese efforts to steal U.S. state secrets or sow political divisions have surfaced. On Friday, the Department of Justice indicted two Chinese nationals and a lawful permanent resident for conspiring to traffic sensitive American military technology to the CCP. Over the weekend, a British businessman was arrested for attempting to smuggle sensitive U.S. military components to China. American artifical intelligence company OpenAI this week also shutdown a Chinese-linked influence operation that was utilizing its ChatGPT product to generate social media posts and sow political division related to U.S. politics online. "The new visa policy is long overdue," Congresswoman Michele Steel said. "After four years of willful ignorance – or gross incompetence – under the Biden administration, President Trump has wasted no time in directing his administration to take the decisive, necessary action to finally thwart the pervasive and growing threat of Chinese communist espionage."Original article source: Chinese chemical bust by border officials underscores multifront effort by CCP to undermine US

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store