
Chinese National Arrested Near Philippine Election Commission With Alleged Spy Device
A Chinese national has been arrested by the Philippine equivalent of the FBI on suspicion of spying after allegedly being found with an electronic eavesdropping device in the trunk of his car.
The man, identified as 47-year-old Lao Tak-Hoi, was allegedly in a gray Mitsubishi Adventure parked outside the Philippine Commission on Elections (Comelec) headquarters in Intramuros, Manila, when he was arrested by the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) on April 29.
The incident follows a recent Senate inquiry that warned of efforts by China to influence democratic processes in the Philippines amid the Chinese communist regime's aggressive island-grabbing in the disputed South China Sea. The Philippines is scheduled to vote on May 12 in its midterm elections.
The man arrested was in possession of an international mobile subscriber identity (IMSI) catcher, the NBI said.
The spy device, which can mimic a cell tower, is capable of intercepting mobile calls, text messages, and location data within a signal range of one to three kilometers (about half a mile to two miles).
Footage of the arrest showed the alleged surveillance device in the trunk of Lao's car. State media reports said the device was being cooled by a makeshift fan to prevent it from overheating during use.
Related Stories
4/28/2025
4/23/2025
NBI spokesperson Ferdinand Lavin told local media that upon investigation, it was determined that the device had been brought into the Philippines as separate parts and assembled in the country.
'This is dangerous. This is dangerous to our national security matters,' the spokesperson said, adding that there are concerns the suspect was using the IMSI device to target the Comelec.
'That's a possibility. We're not saying that's it, but that's a possibility. Why would you go to our areas in Intramuros, especially the Comelec? We were alarmed because he approached such a sensitive government facility.'
He added that the NBI had surveillance footage of Lao and another Chinese man arranging suspected espionage equipment near the Comelec premises over the weekend.
NBI director Jaime Santiago said that his officers had been tracking Lao for four days before the April 29 arrest. They had observed him roaming the cities of Makati and Taguig in the rented vehicle. The NBI approached him after observing that Lao was making several rounds around the Comelec area in his vehicle.
Lavin said that there have been other instances of arrests of Chinese nationals using IMSI catchers. Authorities on Feb. 25
The NBI said that an investigation uncovered information that allegedly proved the Chinese were spying. The Filipino accomplices told investigators they visited the palace, Camp Aguinaldo, Camp Crame, Villamor Airbase, and the U.S. Embassy.
Chinese nationals (background R) and their alleged Filipino accomplices (L), arrested for alleged espionage, are escorted out of a room by National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) agents after a press conference at the NBI office in Manila, Philippines, on Feb. 25, 2025.
Ted Aljibe/AFP via Getty Images
Philippine Senate Majority Leader Francis Tolentino said the new arrest validates warnings from authorities over threats of foreign interference in the upcoming elections. He said the IMSI was direct evidence of China's covert operations in the Philippines.
'The arrest reinforces what we revealed [in the Senate report]: that there is an active attempt to undermine our elections,' he said.
He thanked the NBI for its 'timely and critical action' to thwart Beijing's 'insidious plan' to advance its agenda.
Authorities charged Lao on April 30 with violations under the Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012, the Data Privacy Act, and the Espionage Act.
'The equipment seized will undergo cyber forensic laboratory examination and data analytics to determine its intended use,' Lavin said.
The Philippine Department of Justice said that whether Lao can be released on bail will be up to the immigration department, as he is a foreigner. He is also charged with violating Philippine immigration laws.
Palace press officer Claire Castro said it was alarming to know a China-linked spy device was being operated near the Comelec headquarters.
'It's quite alarming ... the president has this trust in the intelligence agents that lead the operation,' Castro told reporters at a briefing. 'We will just have to wait for the final investigation on that matter.'
Lao told reporters in broken English at the scene of his arrest that he was a tourist and did not own the vehicle. He told NBI officers that he was 'roaming around to take pictures,' NBI Director Jaime Santiago said on local radio True FM.
'Why is he obtaining data and images? His alibi that he is just a tourist is unbelievable,' he said.
Santiago added that Lao was allegedly accompanied by a local driver whom he was paying 8,000 Philippine
pesos
($150) a day for the service.
Lao arrived in the Philippines on April 25 on a passport issued by Macao, which grants holders short stays without the need to apply for a tourist visa. It was his first visit to the country, local media reported, citing Bureau of Immigration records.
Comelec Chairman George Erwin Garcia said that tests showed 'nothing was compromised on any of our system[s],' and that election data was not stored in the headquarters.
'What would be their purpose in doing that? Is it to enhance their mind conditioning efforts? We want to know that,' he said.
National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) chief Jaime Santiago with a confiscated vehicle containing equipment during a press presentation at the NBI office in Manila on Feb. 25, 2025.
Ted Aljibe/AFP via Getty Images
Chinese Espionage
Tolentino has called for the Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs to summon Chinese Ambassador Huang Xilian to address the alleged acts of espionage by Chinese tourists.
Philippine Sen. Risa Hontiveros said, 'If it's proven that this Chinese national is a spy, this will have serious implications for our already-fraught relationship with Beijing.'
Just days earlier, Tolentino and Philippine National Security Council spokesperson Jonathan Malaya reported that officials had also uncovered evidence of a social media 'troll farm' operation paid for with a check linked to the Chinese Embassy in Manila with the intent to influence the May midterm polls to shape public opinion ahead of the election.
The Chinese Embassy denounced the claims on April 30 and accused certain Philippine politicians of playing the 'China card' to boost their election chances.
Just days earlier, the Chinese coast guard unfurled a Chinese flag on a sandbar within a few miles of a Philippine-occupied island with a military base. After the Philippines responded with its own landing, China claimed that the island was part of its sovereign territory.
Navy spokesperson for the West Philippine Sea, Rear Adm. Roy Vincent Trinidad, said the Chinese state media reports on April 26 about the
The NBI revealed on April 29 that it had subpoenaed a Makati-based firm allegedly paid by the Chinese Embassy to gather an army of 'keyboard warriors' to promote a Chinese Communist Party disinformation campaign on social media ahead of the Philippines' midterm elections.
The bureau said in a statement that it would remain apolitical as it investigates the alleged election interference.
Disinformation Campaigns
The NBI has
Santiago called on the public not to spread the intentionally concocted 'rage bait' that stirs anger to draw engagement, which increases the reach of such content on social media.
'People should be aware of what a rage bait is,' he said. 'When we encounter these posts, one should try to relax and calm down before engaging with it. This allows us to think before we act and avoid promoting this on social media algorithm.'
Santiago urged people to determine trustworthy parties for accurate information and the importance of distinguishing false from factual information.
Amid the warnings, the Lakas-Christian Muslim Democrats party asked the NBI to investigate the source of an allegedly fake document linking House Majority Leader Manuel Jose Dalipe to a fabricated plot to politically undermine members of the Duterte family.
The document, which the group says contained a forged signature, was published in The Manila Times. It spread widely on social media on April 30, causing 'significant reputational damage,' according to Lakas Director Anna Capella Velasco.
The party urged the NBI to request digital tracing information from social media platforms.
'We urge the NBI to treat this matter with the utmost urgency,' Velasco said.
She warned the political hoax could erode trust in the Philippines' democratic institutions just days ahead of the May 12 midterm election.
Philippine national security adviser Eduardo Año on April 30 also warned Philippine nationals that a document alleging that the United States wants the Philippine government to prioritize the impeachment of Philippine Vice President Sara Duterte was fabricated.
'That is totally fake news and fabrication. There is no such document existing in our records and even in the office of the Executive Secretary,' he told GMA News Online.
The United States has a 1951 mutual defense treaty with the Philippines and is engaged in a struggle with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) for public and political support in the region.
Since Marcos took office, tensions have further escalated in the South China Sea, with the Philippines
Hashtags

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

Yahoo
40 minutes ago
- Yahoo
U.S. suspends nuclear equipment supplier licenses to China amid trade war
-- Amid an ongoing trade war, the U.S. has reportedly recently suspended licenses for nuclear equipment suppliers to sell to China's power plants, according to a Reuters report on Friday. The suspensions were issued by the U.S. Department of Commerce and affect export licenses for parts and equipment used in nuclear power plants. The impact of a recent phone call between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping on these suspensions remains unclear. On May 12, the U.S. and China had agreed to roll back triple-digit, tit-for-tat tariffs for 90 days. However, the truce between the world's two biggest economies quickly deteriorated. The U.S. claimed that China reneged on terms related to rare earth elements, while China accused the U.S. of "abusing export control measures" by stating that using Huawei Ascend AI chips anywhere in the world violated U.S. export controls. Despite the current tensions, further talks on key issues were expected after the call between the two presidents. Related articles U.S. suspends nuclear equipment supplier licenses to China amid trade war Trump discusses Ukraine war, Iran with Putin Musk calls Trump's big beautiful bill "pork-filled"
Yahoo
40 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Alert issued for disguised Chinese vaping products targeting West Virginia kids
CHARLESTON, (WBOY) — West Virginia Attorney General J.B. McCuskey is warning of Chinese vape products that are disguised as smart devices and may attract children. According to a release from the Attorney General's Office, reports show that approximately 90% of Chinese vape products entering the United States go undetected. McCuskey and 27 other Attorney Generals have urged the Trump Administration to continue cracking down on China and its 'co-conspirators' distributing the products. 'China is sending billions of dollars of vape products to the United States, but they intentionally mislabel these products to avoid FDA regulation,' McCuskey said in the release. 'We don't know what's in these products, so adults should be aware of that risk.' Advocates help raise awareness in Harrison County for Alzheimer's and Brain Awareness Month McCuskey went on to say that his main concern is that some vape products seem to be targeting children. Photos provided with the release depict vapes with games and apps on the front, similar to a smart device. The release also said that some vapes have been found containing urine, methamphetamine and heroin. 'I'm a dad to two girls, so I understand parents' constant worry,' McCuskey said. 'We all want to protect our kids, and that job is harder when foreign actors directly target them. I hope to inform the public of this danger while we work with the Trump Administration to stop the problem at its source.' In December of 2024, West Virginia led the nation in the number of eighth graders who consume nicotine and tobacco products. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
40 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Over the moon: How the Trump-Musk feud helps the lunar mission
The alliance between Donald Trump and Elon Musk — to borrow a phrase from the space community — has undergone a rapid unscheduled disassembly. Yet amid all the fireworks Thursday from the duo's public meltdown, one area of the space world seems to have a brighter future: the moon mission. Musk, the SpaceX founder and well-known Mars enthusiast, has argued against returning astronauts to the lunar surface. But the stunning forced exitof the billionaire's handpicked nominee for NASA chief and Musk's massive rupture with the president have handed moon backers in Congress and industry an opening — and they're seizing it. 'Elon was the main reason for the fork in the road for NASA's human exploration plans,' said Clayton Swope, a former congressional adviser on space. 'With his exodus from D.C., there's a good chance NASA will refocus back to the moon with the plan: moon then Mars.' A number of major space companies — just not SpaceX — are launching an ad campaign going big on the moon, according to two industry officials granted anonymity to discuss the effort. The move is the first sign of real pushback against the behemoth space company and its founder, who only days ago seemed to lock down government contracts every time he blinked. A television ad funded by the companies, who do not go by an umbrella name, will appear on television in the coming days with a pitch clearly aimed at Trump. A narrator, underlaid by dramatic images of America's Apollo missions, implores voters to call senators in support of the moon mission and 'keep America first in space.' A separate letter addressed to the Senate Commerce Committee, and obtained by POLITICO, backs investments in the moon, and is signed by a lengthy slate of prominent space companies — but not SpaceX. As the feud between Trump and Musk escalated on Thursday evening, the Senate Commerce Committee unveiled a new reconciliation bill that would channel $10 billion to NASA. Much of it would go to the space agency's effort to return to the moon through the Artemis program. The White House's NASA budget had proposed major cuts to Artemis, including slashing a planned lunar space station and moon missions. 'Anybody who's following space will have noticed how deeply committed [the committee is] to getting back to the moon, particularly before the Chinese get there,' said a committee aide, who was granted anonymity to discuss the bill. All of this is happening amid Musk's very public fall from grace. Trump, during the social media showdown with his former confidante, threatened to cancel Musk's contracts with the government. The SpaceX founder responded by saying he would end the Dragon spacecraft contract, which is the U.S.' only reliable way of accessing the International Space Station. (But he also suggested late Thursday night that he might not actually do so, and Trump played down the dispute in a POLITICO interview.) The president had already abruptly pulled the NASA administrator nomination for Musk ally Jared Isaacman last week, just days ahead of his likely confirmation by the Senate. Isaacman, speaking on a podcast this week, linked his ouster to Musk's provocative departure from the White House. 'I don't think the timing was much of a coincidence,' he said. This all means Congress may now have a stronger hand in negotiations with the White House over the NASA budget, which was written before Musk's break from Trump and heavily favors Mars. The administration's budget proposes major cuts to spending for the moon in favor of nearly $1 billion for landing an astronaut on Mars. SpaceX, thanks to provisions in the bill, was likely to snag a lucrative contract to build the landing system for any red planet mission. That seems much less feasible now. Senators from states with large NASA centers — such as Alabama and Louisiana — are particularly keen to latch on to moon funding. Trump has voiced support for a Mars mission, meaning the idea may not have completely faded. But with Musk's implosion and the latest moon push, a return to the lunar surface is on firmer ground than it was just a week ago. POLITICO PRO SPACE: Need an insider's guide to the politics behind the new space race? From battles over sending astronauts to Mars to the ways space companies are vying to influence regulators, this weekly newsletter decodes the personalities, policy and power shaping the final frontier. Try it for free for a limited time starting today. Find out more.