Colorado State University Module 4 Economic Espionage Forensic Report Case Study Economic espionage is a serious threat to U.S. companies that rely on innovation, according to the National Counterintelligence and Security Centers 2018 report, Foreign Economic Espionage in Cyberspace (Links to an external site.).
Based on the case you researched and analyzed in Modules 2 and 4, write revised policies in response to the economic espionage attack.
Be sure to include in your assignment:
Background information about case
A profile of the organization
When the incident occurred
What happened as a result of the attack
What the organization must protect
Potential threats to security
User responsibilities
Monitoring of the computer systems
Access controls
Penalties for violation
Your paper must meet the following requirements:
8 pages in length, not including the cover page and reference page.
Formatted according to the APA guideline Include an introduction, a body with fully developed paragraphs, and a conclusion.
Be clearly and well-written using excellent grammar and style techniques. Be concise. Be logical. You are being graded in part on the quality of your writing.
Support your paper with at least four peer-reviewed, scholarly references. Running head: ECONOMIC ESPIONAGE
Economic Espionage (Option #2)
ITS 455Digital Forensics and Investigations
April 10, 2020
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ECONOMIC ESPIONAGE
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Introduction
In this paper, we will discuss a case of economic espionage involving two businessmen,
one American citizen, other a Chinese national. In 1997, Pin Yen Yang and Sally Yang, Pins
daughter, were charged with conspiring of committing Economic Espionage. This paper will
describe the evidence collected in this case and provide an analysis of that evidence.
Evidence
Pin Yeng Yang and his daughter Hwei Chen Yang were arrested on September 5, 1997.
Everything started in 1989, when Pin Yen Yang, the President of a Taiwan company called Four
Pillars Enterprise. The Taiwan company was stealing confidential information and research data
from Avery Dennison Corporation through an employee of Avery Dennison in Cleveland, Ohio.
The Avery employee, Dr. Ten Hong Lee, received between $150,000 and $160,000 for trading
highly sensitive manufacturing information and research data over a period of eight years from
1989 to 1997. Compensation were made through Lees family members in Taiwan which would
then be wired to him in Ohio from his family members. It was estimated that the overall value of
the stolen information from Avery were in the tens of millions of dollars worth of data. Lee was
confronted by the FBI and pleaded guilty to charges of economic espionage. Six months later,
The court sentenced Yang to two years’ probation, six months of home confinement in lieu of
imprisonment, and a $250,000 fine and Sally Yang was sentenced to one year’s probation and a
$5000 fine (1997).
Conclusion
In conclusion, this case was just one of many cases involving economic espionage by
China or individuals acting for Chinese interests. It is cheaper, easier, and less costly to steal
information and trade secrets, than to perform research and develop it using its own resources.
ECONOMIC ESPIONAGE
References
CRM. (1997, September 5). TAIWANESE BUSINESSMAN AND DAUGHTER. Retrieved
from https://www.justice.gov/archive/opa/pr/1997/September97/368crm.html
Yang v. United States – Response (Hold). (2014, October 22). Retrieved from
https://www.justice.gov/osg/brief/yang-v-united-states-response-hold
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