Motorola worker found guilty of stealing trade secrets

Hanjuan Jin tried to flee to China with more than a thousand Motorola documents

A judge in Chicago ruled this week that a former Motorola employee is guilty of trying to steal trade secrets from the company and flee to China.

On Feb. 28, 2007, U.S. Customs agents at O’Hare International Airport stopped Hanjuan Jin, a Chinese-born naturalized U.S. citizen, before she boarded a flight to China. Jin was holding a one-way ticket to her home country, as well as $30,000 in cash and more than a thousand Motorola documents, which agents found during a search.

Jin claimed she just took the documents to simply refresh her technical knowledge after a long absence from work. Prosecutors claimed, however, that Jin was working with Beijing-based technology company Kai Sun News Technology Co. and had plans to sell the documents when she arrived in China. Her trial began in November 2011.

Although U.S. District Judge Ruben Castillo found Jin guilty of stealing trade secrets, he acquitted her on charges that she did so to sell the secrets to Kai Sun. In his ruling Wednesday, Judge Castillo convicted Jin on three counts of economic espionage, each of which carries a possible sentence of 15 years in prison. Jin will be confined to her home until sentencing on April 18.

“We want to send a message to the corporate community that we take the theft of trade secrets very seriously,” Chicago U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald told reporters after the ruling.

Comments

InsideScoop Daily eNewsletter

InsideScoop delivers the latest-breaking news affecting in-house counsel. Get the latest business trends, current corporate litigation, labor developments, technology initiatives and more — FREE. Sign up now!

You have been subscribed! You will receive a confirmation email soon.

See the entire list of InsideCounsel eNewsletters.

Resource Library


Reduce eDiscovery Costs and Risks through Email Disposition

Read this white paper to learn best practices on determining email retention periods with real...

Prepare for the Eventuality of eDiscovery Now and Reap the...

This report presents an overview of eDiscovery implementation challenges organizations may face as well as...

The Fastest and Most Cost-Effective Document Review Available!

Recommind's Predictive Coding is the market's only solution that allows clients the option of reviewing...

Bring the Benefits of Decision Tree Analysis to Your Everyday...

In this on-demand webinar, learn how to counter the challenges of litigation with predictive analytics...

13 Things to do Now to Reduce Risk and Avoid...

We have developed best practices for lowering your e-Discovery costs, shortening the length of your...

7 Simple Strategies for Improving Legal Fee Budgeting Certainty

Understanding the legal fee budgeting paradigm and following seven simple strategies will help you control...

Complimentary White Paper: Best Practices for Meeting Critical eDiscovery Challenges

Packed with practical advice, this white paper discusses best practices for meeting eDiscovery challenges across...

Complimentary White Paper "Key Considerations for Collection Methodologies and Resources"

This white paper addresses the need for companies to reevaluate their current collection policies in...

Moving Matters In-House: How Technology Enables Legal In-Sourcing

Strategically shifting more matters to in-house counsel has proven to be an effective strategy to...

5 Ways to Promote Responsible Content Sharing

Find out five ways that organizations can promote responsible sharing of content among employees by...

View All »

Advertisement. Closing in 15 seconds.