NATIONAL NEWS

Chinese dissident who led pro-democracy group in NYC pleads guilty to spying for Beijing

Sep 16, 2025, 7:14 PM

NEW YORK (AP) — A member of New York’s Chinese dissident community pleaded guilty Tuesday to spying on his fellow activists on behalf of the Chinese government.

Yuanjun Tang, 68, had long been an outspoken critic of the Chinese Communist Party, joining monthly protests outside the country’s Manhattan consulate and founding a pro-democracy nonprofit in Flushing, Queens, where he has lived since 2002.

But as he publicly advocated against his homeland’s government, Tang was quietly acting on orders from Beijing’s intelligence service to collect information on his fellow Chinese American activists, according to a guilty plea entered Tuesday.

Federal prosecutors, who brought charges against Tang last August, believe he accepted the tasks in order to gain approval to visit family members in China. An emailed inquiry to his attorney was not returned.

“Tang’s betrayal of the ideals of the US to help the Chinese government repress pro-democracy activists goes against the very values he claimed to promote,” FBI Assistant Director in Charge Christopher G. Raia said in a statement.

At the direction of a Chinese intelligence officer, Tang agreed to photograph and record local protests against China, including a 2023 event in Manhattan dedicated to victims of the Tiananmen Square massacre, according to court documents.

Tang also provided the officer with a list of immigration attorneys working to help dissidents gain political asylum.

Tang himself was granted asylum in the U.S. in 2002, shortly after escaping to Taiwan from a Chinese prison where he was held for 12 years for his involvement in student-led protests in Tiananmen Square, according to reports at the time.

He then founded a Flushing-based pro-democracy group, the Chinese Democracy Party Eastern US Headquarters Inc., from he which he voiced frequent public criticism of the Chinese Communist Party.

Tang’s arrest followed several high-profile investigations into China’s attempts to harass and silence dissidents abroad, part of what federal officials have called a campaign of “transnational repression.”

Last summer, a Chinese American scholar, Shujun Wang, who also co-founded a New York-based pro-democracy group, was convicted on charges of gathering information for the Chinese on Hong Kong democracy protesters, supporters of Taiwanese independence, Uyghur and Tibetan activists and others.

The year prior, the Justice Department brought charges against two men it said had helped establish a secret police outpost in Manhattan’s Chinatown neighborhood on behalf of the Chinese government.

In 2018, speaking with the New York Times about a book in which he was featured, Tang offered a hint of disillusionment about the role of a dissident abroad.

“In the first year you speak brave, bold words,” he said. “In the second, nonsense. By the third, you have nothing to say at all.”

Tang is set to be sentenced in January. He faces up to five years in prison if convicted.

National News

FILE - Students walk by graffiti near university president Richard Saller's office at Stanford Univ...

Associated Press

Trial begins for Stanford students for occupying president’s office in pro-Palestinian protest

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A trial began Friday for five current and former Stanford University students who occupied the university president’s offices during a pro-Palestinian protest in 2024 — in a rare instance of demonstrators facing trial for actions from the wave of campus protests that year. Authorities initially arrested and charged 12 people after […]

55 minutes ago

People gather around a makeshift memorial honoring the victim of a fatal shooting involving federal...

Associated Press

Wife of Minnesota woman killed in ICE shooting: ‘We had whistles. They had guns’

WASHINGTON (AP) — The wife of Renee Good, the woman shot and killed in her car by a federal immigration agent in Minneapolis, says the couple had stopped to support their neighbors on the day of the shooting and described the mother of three as leaving a legacy of kindness. “We had whistles. They had […]

1 hour ago

Demonstrators holds signs during a protest by Uber and Lyft drivers asking state regulators to take...

Associated Press

Lyft and Uber drivers protest Waymo robotaxis as California considers further regulations

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Drivers for Lyft and Uber protested self-driving Waymo taxis in San Francisco on Friday, urging state regulators to exercise greater oversight of autonomous vehicles, given recent events in which the cars killed pets and blocked traffic. About two dozen drivers and supporters spoke or held up signs calling for safer streets […]

2 hours ago

U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem speaks during a press conference, Thursday, Jan. 8, 20...

Associated Press

Judge to temporarily block effort to end protections for relatives of citizens, green card holders

BOSTON (AP) — A federal judge said Friday that she expects to temporarily block efforts by the Trump administration to end a program that offered temporary legal protections for more than 10,000 family members of citizens and green card holders. U.S. District Judge Indira Talwani said at a hearing that she planned to issue a […]

2 hours ago

FILE - A sign is seen outside a clinic with the South Plains Public Health District, Feb. 23, 2025,...

Associated Press

South Carolina measles outbreak grows by nearly 100, spreads to North Carolina and Ohio

South Carolina’s measles outbreak exploded into one of the worst in the U.S., with state health officials confirming 99 new cases in the past three days. The outbreak centered in Spartanburg County grew to 310 cases over the holidays, and spawned cases in North Carolina and Ohio among families who traveled to the outbreak area […]

2 hours ago

FILE - People ski between the trees in the deep powder at Telluride Ski Resort, March 10, 2006. (AP...

Associated Press

Telluride reopening as striking ski patrollers accept contract, return to work

FORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP) — Telluride Ski Resort in southwestern Colorado began to reopen Friday after a vote by striking ski patrollers to accept a contract and return to work. The resort shut down Dec. 27 after the Telluride Professional Ski Patrol Association rejected a company pay proposal. The resort remained closed except for beginner […]

3 hours ago

Chinese dissident who led pro-democracy group in NYC pleads guilty to spying for Beijing