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Chinese Company Convicted of Stealing Trade Secrets From US Firm


A portion of the Sinovel Wind Group home page.
A portion of the Sinovel Wind Group home page.

A federal jury in Wisconsin on Wednesday convicted a Chinese wind turbine company of stealing trade secrets, which nearly destroyed a U.S. manufacturer.

China's Sinovel Wind Group does business in the United States.

"The theft of ideas and ingenuity is not a business dispute. It's a crime and will be prosecuted as such," U.S. Attorney Scott Blader said.

According to the government's case against Sinovel, the company had an $800 million contract for products and services from Wisconsin-based American Superconductor (AMSC).

FILE - Birds fly past the company logo of Sinovel outside its head office in Beijing, Jan. 6, 2011.
FILE - Birds fly past the company logo of Sinovel outside its head office in Beijing, Jan. 6, 2011.

It said Sinovel conspired in 2011 with two company managers and a former AMSC employee to use computers in Austria to steal wind turbine technology and trade secrets from AMSC and install them on Sinovel turbines.

Sinovel never paid AMSC the $800 million.

Federal prosecutors said Sinovel's crime cost AMSC dearly; investors dumped more than $1 billion in AMSC stock and about 700 workers lost their jobs, more than half of the company's global workforce.

Sinovel will be sentenced in June.

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