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Massive Operation Smuggling Semiconductors from US to China Uncovered

Daniel Nenni

Admin
Staff member
Massive Operation Smuggling Semiconductors from US to China Uncovered.jpg


Semiconductors are an essential part of today's modern life.

Local customs officials have apprehended executives of a distribution company involved in the smuggling of U.S.-made semiconductor integrated circuit (IC) chips, classified as strategic items, into China after importing them for domestic use. This marks the first instance of customs discovering the use of South Korea as a transit route for exporting foreign-made semiconductors to China.

The Seoul Main Customs Office announced on Jan. 25 that it had referred the 40-something CEO and executives of Company A, which distributes overseas electronic components in South Korea, to the Seoul Central District Prosecutors’ Office without detention on charges of violating the Foreign Trade Act, the Customs Act, and the Act on the Regulation of Concealment of Criminal Proceeds.

According to customs, from August 2020 to August of last year, these individuals operated Company A and purchased communication semiconductor IC chips made by a renowned U.S. semiconductor company and imported for domestic use through domestic telecommunications equipment development companies. They then smuggled these chips to China 144 times by sending them via air transport without declaring them to customs. These chips, designated as strategic items in 2020, convert analog signals to digital in communication relays and are subject to export and import restrictions without government permission due to their potential use in the manufacture of weapons of mass destruction.

The investigation revealed that 96,000 semiconductor IC chips worth approximately 13.9 billion won (US$11.6 million) were smuggled through Company A, with 53,000 of these chips, valued at 11.8 billion won, being classified as strategic items. The IC chips in question, produced by a U.S.-based semiconductor manufacturer, are supplied domestically only through official Korean distributors, which require an end-user certificate and a non-re-exportation commitment from the importer for distribution management. Thus, importing by entities other than the end-user, like Company A, is normally impossible.

Company A circumvented these restrictions by having domestic telecommunications equipment development companies import more IC chips than needed through official Korean distributors, then obtained the excess for smuggling. The chips were repackaged in small quantities and disguised as sample products for shipment to China without obtaining the necessary export permission from the Minister of Trade, Industry, and Energy.

Their profit-making scheme was meticulously planned. They inflated the value of semiconductor components worth only 4 million won to 7.5 billion won when exporting them to Hong Kong, falsely declaring this to customs and submitting fabricated documents to banks to receive the smuggling proceeds. The remainder of the funds was brought into the country through illegal means such as money laundering.

 
Been to a few Seminars on this subject given by US Govt here in Singapore.

Folk really do set out to circumvent the laws, the case studies used showed digging through 10 plus layers of legitimate companies before the suspicious characters were found and the whole thing rumbled.

Its a thankless task and relies a lot on tip.offs and such like
 
Wouldn't it be more efficient for the US government to slap an export tax on the banned semiconductors for China, cut out the middlemen in Korea/Middle East/wherever and invest the proceeds in defence ? Set the tax level just high enough to make the secondary trade unprofitable. Not being entirely serious, but as with Prohibition, the policy risks making a lot of the "wrong people" very rich.

Presumably, it isn't too difficult or expensive to mark up products for export to China in some unique way (die marking, different packaging, etc).
 
Having a first-hand view of the underworld, this is not surprising at all. Anything can be had for a price. From arms, drugs, people and anything else you can imagine. Many times, what the government says it's doing and what it actually does are totally different. Anything including nukes can be bought and sold, it's only price that matters. A major drug dealer was given immunity for proving he could buy a Russian sub with nukes if the price was right years ago.
 
Wouldn't it be more efficient for the US government to slap an export tax on the banned semiconductors for China, cut out the middlemen in Korea/Middle East/wherever and invest the proceeds in defence ? Set the tax level just high enough to make the secondary trade unprofitable. Not being entirely serious, but as with Prohibition, the policy risks making a lot of the "wrong people" very rich.

Presumably, it isn't too difficult or expensive to mark up products for export to China in some unique way (die marking, different packaging, etc).

Most of these chips aren't even made in the US
 
Having a first hand view of semiconductor distributors this is business as usual. If you look inside the weapons Russia uses they are filled with US based semiconductors. Programmable devises are big in military electronics. They can buy the devices on the black market or they can buy electronics that contain these devices. By hook or by crook.... What do you think China's and N.Korea's military electronics are filled with? We have armed the entire world!
 
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