HomeAmericaUS seizes 13 website domains tied to alleged Chinese intelligence collection

US seizes 13 website domains tied to alleged Chinese intelligence collection

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By AJ Vicens

June 10 (Reuters) - ‌Federal authorities announced on Wednesday the seizure of 13 internet ​domains tied to what the U.S. Justice Department called fake consulting firms designed to recruit current ⁠or former U.S. government and military employees to provide information to suspected Chinese agents.

These fake firms target people via job listings for consulting or analyst roles, and ​then pressure applicants for exclusive or insider information, the department said in a statement.

"(Wednesday's) seizures ‌send a clear message that any attempts to exploit Americans trusted with access to our nation's most sensitive information will be exposed and dismantled," U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro for ⁠the District of Columbia said in the statement.

The announcement of ⁠the domain seizures came a week after the United States, Britain and the other Five Eyes intelligence alliance countries warned of China aggressively and increasingly using job platforms to target people for information. 

A spokesperson for the Chinese Embassy in Washington said ‌that "the allegation of so-called 'Chinese espionage threat' is entirely fabricated and constitutes malicious slander. ⁠We strongly condemn this."

Allegations that Chinese intelligence is using ‌phony consultancies to recruit American and other Western officials ​are not new. Reuters reported in March 2025 that a similar network of fake consulting firms was attempting to enlist federal employees who had been recently ‌fired as part of President Donald Trump's downsizing and ​reshaping of the government.

The FBI and ⁠the National Counterintelligence and Security Center published a short film in ‌September 2020 dramatizing the case of former ⁠CIA officer Kevin Mallory, who in 2019 was sentenced to 20 years in prison after being convicted on charges of conspiring to transmit U.S. defense secrets to ​China.

Mallory had initially been recruited ‌for foreign policy consulting via social media, according to court records, and his story ⁠is prominently featured on an FBI website ​warning of "virtual espionage" using similar tactics.

(Reporting by AJ Vicens in Detroit; Editing ​by Will Dunham and Frankin Paul)

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