SEATTLE
FBI agents took former defense intelligence officer Ron Hansen, 58, into custody for spying while he was on his way to Seattle-Tacoma International Airport in Seattle to board a connecting flight to China, officials announced Monday.
He was arrested on federal charges including trying to give national defense information to China, officials said.
“Ron Rockwell Hansen is a former Defense Intelligence Agency officer who allegedly attempted to transmit national defense information to the People’s Republic of China’s intelligence service and also allegedly received hundreds of thousands of dollars while illegally acting as an agent of China,” said Assistant Attorney General John Demers. “His alleged actions are a betrayal of our nation’s security and the American people and are an affront to his former intelligence community colleagues. Our intelligence professionals swear an oath to protect our country’s most closely held secrets and the National Security Division will continue to relentlessly pursue justice against those who violate this oath.”
Hansen, of Syracuse, Utah, is charged in a 15-count complaint of attempting to gather or deliver national defense information to aid a foreign government.
The complaint also charges Hansen with acting as an unregistered foreign agent for China, bulk cash smuggling, structuring monetary transactions and smuggling goods from the United States.
According to court documents:
Hansen retired from the U.S. Army as a Warrant Officer with a background in signals intelligence and human intelligence. He speaks fluent Mandarin-Chinese and Russian.
The Intelligence Agency hired Hansen as a civilian intelligence case officer in 2006. Hansen held a Top Secret clearance for many years, and signed several non-disclosure agreements during his tenure at DIA and as a government contractor.
Between 2013 and 2017, Hansen regularly traveled between the United States and China, attending military and intelligence conferences in the U.S. and provided the information he learned at the conferences to contacts in China associated with Chinese Intelligence.
Hansen received payments for this information by a variety of methods, including cash, wires and credit card transactions.
He also improperly sold export-controlled technology to persons in China.
From May of 2013 to the date of the complaint, Hansen received not less than $800,000 in funds originating from China.
In addition, Hansen repeatedly attempted to regain access to classified information after he stopped working on behalf of the U.S. Government.
Hansen’s alerting behavior ultimately resulted in the participation of a law enforcement source from whom Hansen solicited classified information.
Hansen disclosed to the source his ongoing contact with the PRCIS, including in-person meetings with intelligence officers during his trips to China.
Hansen told the source the types of information his contacts in China were interested in and discussed working with the source to provide such information to Chinese Intelligence. Hansen suggested he and the source would be handsomely paid.
Hansen faces a maximum penalty of life in prison if convicted of attempted espionage. He is presumed innocent unless he is proven guilty.