News

Two Chinese researchers were charged with trying to smuggle strains of a fungus called Fusarium graminearum into the U.S.
The biological pathogen federal authorities accuse two Chinese nationals of smuggling into the U.S. was not likely an act of ...
The toxins produced by Fusarium graminearum cause vomiting, liver damage, and reproductive defects in livestock and humans,” ...
The Chinese attempts this year to smuggle pathogens may be only the latest incidents in a Chinese campaign to bring down ...
Attorneys have agreed to postpone a preliminary examination in U.S. District Court until August while a plea deal is being ...
Federal authorities arrest Chinese nationals for allegedly smuggling dangerous biological materials, including a crop-killing ...
Two Chinese scientists accused of smuggling or shipping biological material into the United States without permits will ...
Several cases have raised fears that Chinese nationals are part of a campaign to terrorize the U.S. agricultural industry & ...
In the joint filing, prosecutors and Yunqing Jian's defense team said, "The parties are currently engaged in plea ...
Zunyong Liu, 34, was arrested after biological pathogens were discovered on his luggage at the Detroit Metro Airport. Liu told authorities that he was visiting his girlfriend, Yunqing Jian, 33.
According to an arrest affidavit for University of Michigan post-doctoral research fellow Yunqing Jian and her boyfriend, Zunyong Liu, Jian first brought Fusarium graminearum, described as a ...
Federal prosecutors have charged two Chinese researchers with smuggling a crop-killing fungus into the U.S. last summer. The ...