
Chinese nationals living in US charged with smuggling millions worth of Nvidia's powerful AI chips to Beijing
The pair allegedly shipped advanced graphic processing units, including Nvidia H100 GPUs and Nvidia 4090 GPUs, to China from October 2022 to July 2025 through their El Monte-based company, ALX Solutions, according to an affidavit filed with the complaint in US District Court in Los Angeles.
Chuan Geng, 28, of Pasadena, and Shiwei Yang, 28, of El Monte, were charged with violating the Export Control Reform Act, a felony that carries a maximum of 20 years in federal prison.
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Yang, an illegal alien who overstayed her visa, was arrested on Saturday and Geng, a lawful permanent resident, surrendered to federal authorities later that day.
The smuggled chips were the 'most powerful GPU chip on the market,' and 'designed specifically for AI applications,' such as 'to develop self-driving cars, medical diagnosis systems, and other AI-powered applications,' according to the complaint.
The arrests come months after the Trump administration imposed sweeping export curbs in May in an attempt to crack down on China's ability get its hands on advanced chips to throttle Beijing in the AI race.
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Nonetheless, a bombshell report late last month revealed at least $1 billion worth of Nvidia chips were smuggled into China in the three months following Trump's ban.
The powerful chips were still being sold by Chinese suppliers to data center operators – even after the controls took hold, according to a Financial Times analysis of sales contracts, company filings and interviews with sources with direct knowledge of the deals.
ALX Solutions was founded shortly after the Commerce Department began requiring licenses for advanced microchips in 2018 during Trump's first term in office — including the ones that Yang and Geng are accused of shipping overseas, according to court documents.
The company allegedly used a common tactic to skirt export restrictions by shippiing the illicit wares to China through other countries.
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ALX Solutions routed at least at least 20 shipments, including one last December, from the US by using freight-forwarding companies in Singapore and Malaysia, according to the DOJ.
The pair made several shipments of graphic processing units to China from October 2022 up until last month, according to an affidavit filed with the complaint.
BLKstudio – stock.adobe.com
The California firm never received payments from the those in Singapore and Malaysia, but it did receive money from companies in Hong Kong and China – including a $1 million payment in January 2024, the complaint alleged.
The defendants' phones – which law enforcement seized last week after raiding their office – also revealed incriminating conversations about routing chips through Malaysia to evade US laws, the complaint alleged.
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Geng was released by a federal judge late Monday on $250,000 bond. Yang remains behind bars to await a detention hearing on Aug. 12. Their arraignment is slated for Sept. 11.
The Justice Department declined to provide further comment.
Lawyers for the Chinese nationals were not immediately known. The Post reached out to ALX solutions for comment.
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Los Angeles Times
22 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
Disney's settlement with ‘Mandalorian' actor Gina Carano isn't capitulation. Firing her was
Actress Gina Carano, Lucasfilm and its parent company Walt Disney Co. have settled the federal lawsuit filed in which Carano claimed that, in 2021, she was wrongfully terminated from her role in 'The Mandalorian' after she expressed her conservative political views on social media. The settlement details have not been made public, but Lucasfilm released a statement praising Carano's on-set professionalism and expressing the hope of 'identifying opportunities to work together with Ms. Carano in the near future.' I am here to beg everyone to remain calm and avoid using the four Cs: cancel culture (is this the end of it?) and corporate capitulation (is this another example of it?) No and no. Cancel culture has long been an amorphous and often recklessly applied term, used to describe a litany of events, including but certainly not limited to male predators losing their jobs, students protesting their school's choice of graduation speakers and outrage over J.K. Rowling's stance on transgender women. Recently, however, it has taken a far more concrete shape that looks astonishingly like the White House where President Trump continues to literally cancel all manner of things, including U.S. membership in the World Health Organization, the regulatory power of the Environmental Protection Agency and huge portions of Medicaid. Recently, he fired the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics after the bureau documented weaker than expected numbers for July and downward revisions for the previous two months. Corporate capitulation, too, is alive and well, with law firms, universities and media companies falling like dominoes before Trump's lawsuits and threats of defunding. Last year, Trump sued ABC and its parent company Disney for defamation after anchor George Stephanopoulos wrongly stated on air that Trump had been found civilly liable for raping E. Jean Carroll — Trump had been found civilly liable of sexually assaulting and defaming Carroll. 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In 2020, she had caught some flack for posting 'beep/bop/boop' as her pronouns in her Twitter bio, which some took as her way of mocking trans people. She denied this, changed her bio and expressed support for the trans community. There were also posts that criticized masking policies and shutdowns during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as one calling for an investigation into voter fraud after the 2020 election. But it was a repost on Instagram that cost her her job — in February 2021, she reposted a famously horrific image of a half-naked Jewish woman fleeing from a mob with a moronically simplistic message about divisive politics: 'Most people today don't realize that to get to the point where Nazi soldiers could easily round up thousands of Jews, the government first made their own neighbors hate them simply for being Jews. How is that any different from hating someone for their political views?' 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I do not agree with the sentiments Carano expressed in her posts, but compared with the blithely toxic abuse regularly used on social media, they are relatively benign, based far more on genuine ignorance — most people are in fact aware of the vicious antisemitism leveraged by the Nazis as well as their institutionalized tactics of fear — than anything else. Of course, those who attempt to be politically provocative on social media (and reposting a photo of a victimized Jewish woman in such context is the definition of political provocation) cannot then feign shock and dismay when people are provoked, especially at a time when far-right tweets, including the president's, had led to a violent attack against lawmakers. (Hence the irony of Musk's support — the platform he renamed X was in large part built on its ability to harness all manner of just and unjust hashtag campaigns.) But as my colleague Robin Abcarian noted when Carano filed her lawsuit in 2023, the social media mob's decision that a woman, who was far from a household name, deserved to lose her livelihood, and more important, Lucasfilm's agreement with that decision, was extreme. Bad publicity is never good for an entertainment property and whether it was explicit in her contract or not, Carano did represent, to a certain extent, 'The Mandalorian,' Lucasfilm and Disney. Unfortunately, the entertainment industry's increasing reliance on social media has created a world in which actors and other creative types are expected to amass millions of followers on platforms that tend to reward the outspoken and outrageous over the thoughtful. Encouraged to reveal themselves 'authentically,' stars can find themselves prodded by fans to comment on current events and excoriated when they refuse or respond in a way that certain followers consider insincere or politically incorrect. Telling people to stay off social media is not the answer; neither is regulation by hashtag campaign. While Carano's case is certainly reflective of many perils that face us at the moment, the fact that she reached a settlement, including an apparent promise of more work, is not a sign of further deterioration. The fear that our cultural landscape is being attacked by political forces that would strangle the notion of free speech and competing ideologies is real and justified. But in this case, the capitulation came not when Disney and Lucasfilm decided to settle with Carano, but when they fired her in the first place.


Los Angeles Times
22 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
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NBC News
23 minutes ago
- NBC News
Leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan shake hands and sign deal at White House peace summit
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The Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict has lasted for decades The two nations were locked in conflict for nearly four decades as they fought for control of the Karabakh region, known internationally as Nagorno-Karabakh. The area was largely populated by Armenians during the Soviet era but is located within Azerbaijan. The two nations battled for control of the region through multiple violent clashes that left tens of thousands of people dead over the decades, all while international mediation efforts failed. Most recently, Azerbaijan reclaimed all of Karabakh in 2023 and had been in talks with Armenia to normalize ties. Azerbaijan's insistence on a land bridge to Nakhchivan had been a major sticking point, because while Azerbaijan did not trust Armenia to control the so-called Zangezur corridor, Armenia resisted control by a third party because it viewed it as a breach of sovereignty. 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