FORMER
DEFENSE DEPARTMENT OFFICIAL
SENTENCED TO
57 MONTHS IN PRISON FOR ESPIONAGE
VIOLATION

July
14, 2008
WASHINGTON,
D.C. -- Gregg William
Bergersen, age 51, of Alexandria,
Virginia, was sentenced today in
the Eastern District of Virginia
to 57 months in prison and three
years of supervised release for
conspiracy to disclose national
defense information to persons
not entitled to receive it, in
violation of 18 U.S.C., Sections
793(d) and (g). Bergersen
pleaded guilty to this offense on
March 31, 2008, after being
arrested by federal authorities
on February 11, 2008.
Patrick Rowan, Acting Assistant
Attorney General for National
Security; U.S. Attorney Chuck
Rosenberg of the Eastern District
of Virginia; and Arthur M.
Cummings, II, Executive Assistant
Director of the FBIs
National Security Branch, made
the announcement after U.S.
District Judge Leonie M. Brinkema
imposed the sentence.
Mr. Bergersen betrayed his
oath to serve and protect our
nation when he used his
government position to access and
pass national defense information
to a person he knew was not
entitled to receive it. Today, he
is paying the price for his
actions, said Patrick
Rowan, Acting Assistant Attorney
General for National Security.
Mr. Bergersen predicted he
would go to jail if anyone
discovered he was unlawfully
providing classified information
to a foreign government. We
did. He is, said U.S.
Attorney Chuck Rosenberg.
Espionage is one of the
most serious crimes any American,
much less a government official
entrusted to serve and protect
our Nation's defense, can
commit," said FBI Executive
Assistant Director Arthur M.
Cummings, National Security
Branch. "The FBI is
working diligently with our
partners in the law enforcement
and intelligence community to
safeguard America's national
defense information and to ensure
individuals who commit such
treasonous acts against the
United States will be held fully
accountable.
According to a Statement of Facts
filed in Court with Bergersens
Plea Agreement, the criminal
conduct spanned the time period
of March 2007 to February
2008. During this time,
Bergersen was a Weapons Systems
Policy Analyst at the Arlington,
Va.-based Defense Security
Cooperation Agency, an agency
within the Department of Defense.
While in this position, Bergersen
provided national defense
information on numerous occasions
to Tai Shen Kuo, a naturalized
U.S. citizen and a New Orleans
businessman. Much of the
information pertained to U.S.
military sales to Taiwan and was
classified at the Secret
level.
During the course of the
conspiracy, Kuo cultivated a
friendship with Bergersen,
bestowing on him gifts, cash
payments, dinners, and money for
gambling during trips to Las
Vegas. Unbeknownst to
Bergersen, Kuo passed along to an
official of the government of the
Peoples Republic of China
(PRC) the information Bergersen
had provided him. As described in
court documents, Kuo operated
within the United States under
the PRC officials
direction, committing numerous
acts of espionage during the time
period of the conspiracy.
In some of his meetings with Kuo,
Bergersen cautioned that the
information he was providing was
classified. On one such
occasion, in July 2007, Bergersen
handed Kuo a classified document
with jagged cut marks at the top
and bottom of each page.
Bergersen pointed out to Kuo that
he had cut off the documents
title and had also removed the
classification markings from the
top and bottom of every page,
ensuring Kuo that he was being
given classified information.
On May 13, 2008, Tai Shen Kuo
pleaded guilty to conspiracy to
deliver national defense
information to a foreign
government, namely, the PRC, in
violation of 18 U.S.C., Section
794(a), (c). Kuo is scheduled to
be sentenced on August 8, 2008
and faces a maximum possible
sentence of life in prison.
On May 28, 2008, another
conspirator in the case, Yu Xin
Kang of New Orleans, La., pleaded
guilty to aiding and abetting an
unregistered agent of a foreign
government, namely the PRC, in
violation of 18 U.S.C., Sections
2 and 951. According to court
documents, Kang assisted Kuo by
periodically serving as a conduit
for information between Kuo and
the PRC official. Kang faces up
to ten years in prison when she
is sentenced on August 1, 2008.
The investigation was conducted
by the FBI. The Air Force Office
of Special Investigations (OSI)
provided substantial assistance
and cooperation throughout the
course of the investigation.
The prosecution is being handled
by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Neil
Hammerstrom and Aaron Zebley from
the U.S. Attorneys Office
for the Eastern District of
Virginia, and Trial Attorney Ryan
Fayhee from the Counterespionage
Section of the Justice Departments
National Security Division.
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