Sep 2013 to Aug 2014 ParalegalFinnegan IP, DC Office
Jun 2013 to Aug 2013 INTERNSHIPChina Legal Daily, Public Inquiry Column
Jun 2012 to Aug 2012 CorrespondentForeign Secretary Office
Jun 2011 to Aug 2011 Legal Clerk People's Republic of China Ministry of JusticeJunhe Law Office
Jun 2009 to Jun 2010 Trainee SolicitorIntermediate Court of Haidian District
Jun 2008 to Aug 2008 Deputy JudgePublic Procurator
Jun 2007 to Aug 2007 Assistant
Education:
Washington University School of Law St. Louis, MO Sep 2012 to May 2013 LLMChina University of Political Science and Law Sep 2010 to May 2012 MasterFull Tuition Waiver for Graduate School Study 2007 to 2008University of Montreal Montral, QC 2008 English
Senior US officials, including president Barack Obama and three US ambassadors to China, had for years urged top Chinese Communist Party and government officials to release the American, Xue Feng. But China showed little leniency, and Mr Xue served all but 10 months of his eight-year prison s
Date: Apr 04, 2015
Category: U.S.
Source: Google
US geologist accused of espionage released from Chinese prison
According to San Francisco-based Dui Hua, Xue Feng was working in China when he helped his employer, energy consulting firm IHS, purchase an oil industry database. But that data was classified, and Xue a naturalized American citizen born in China was detained in the country in late 2007.
The San Francisco-based Dui Hua Foundation said on Saturday that Xue Feng, 50, was deported to the United States immediately after his release on Friday. The human rights group group said Xue was reunited Friday evening with his family in Houston, a city in the southwestern U.S. state of Texas.
With chilling impact, Xue Fengs high-profile legal travails highlighted Beijings deep sensitivities about information it considers secretplus the limits of foreign diplomacy in influencing such cases.
But recent history offers scant hope of a quick release for foreign nationals whose cases attract global attention. In 2010, China sentenced Xue Feng, an American geologist, to eight years in prison, after he had already spent two-and-a-half years awaiting sentencing. He was found guilty of violatin
Date: Aug 06, 2014
Category: World
Source: Google
If You're a Foreigner Using GPS in China, You Could Be a 'Spy'
In 2011, the government sentenced geologist Xue Feng, a naturalized American citizen of Chinese birth, to three years in prison for allegedly violating state secrets while working for IHS Energy (it should be noted that Xue was held for three years before his trial, and, his family says, tortured).
In 2010, an American geologist, Xue Feng, was sentenced to eight years in prison for trying to buy data about locations of Chinese oil wells. His lawyers said the data were commercially available but a court convicted him of trying to obtain state secrets.
On one cold February morning, Huntsman stood on the sidewalk in front of a Chinese courthouse surrounded by foreign reporters. The Beijing People's High Court had just rejected the appeal of an American citizen, Xue Feng, who had challenged his eight-year sentence for violating state secrets rules.