Stealing trade secrets will U.S. crack down?

AuthorKaltenheuser, Skip
PositionGlobal Competition

It's tough on a company when well-kept trade secrets suddenly migrate to foreign lands, to emerge in the products of competitors. Mischief that has splashed across newspaper pages this year includes accusations of Chinese citizens trying to float out trade secrets from former U.S. employers or of shipping restricted technologies to China. The affair of an FBI agent with a Chinese woman -- allegedly a double agent -- is no doubt keeping TV movie scriptwriters up late at night.

Presumably, the Department of Justice is loading both barrels of the Economic Espionage Act (EEA), enacted in 1996 to criminalize the theft of trade secrets, and firing indictments left and right. Right?

Not exactly. The EEA hasn't been comatose, but since March 2000, EEA activity has publicly surfaced in only a couple of dozen cases. Most accused perpetrators are either company insiders or ex-employees. Stolen secrets are often customer information or computer source codes and software, though sometimes it's as exotic as genetic screening discoveries or a DNA cell line. Only twice have prosecutors filed indictments under the EEA alleging state-sponsored activity.

The value of stolen secrets is really anyone's guess, but estimates are periodically made by the American Society for Industrial Security. The latest survey, done in cooperation with PricewaterhouseCoopers and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, pulled data from July 2000 through June 2001 from Fortune 1000 as well as small and mid-sized companies. The survey team put the value of U.S. company losses in proprietary information and intellectual property during that period at $53 billion-$59 billion, though by no means is all that attributable to foreign activity. R&D and financial departments racked up the greatest losses per incident.

Peter J. Toren, a partner in the New York office of Sidley, Austin, Brown & Wood and a former federal prosecutor who helped draft the EEA, expects more indictments. "Since 9/11, Justice has been rightly focused on more important issues," Toren says. "That will soon change. Because of the economic downturn, foreign countries and companies are more focused than ever on obtaining trade secrets."

Business as Usual?

Toren contends that illegal activity will be deterred only if the government pursues enough cases to...

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