The U.S. Justice Department has arrested two Chinese nationals in what prosecutors describe as an elaborate chip smuggling operation, even as the political winds around tech exports shift. Fanyue Gong, a New York-based Chinese citizen, and Benlin Yuan, a Canadian national originally from China, allegedly helped funnel Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) H100 and H200 chips into China in violation of export controls.
The Smuggling Scheme Uncovered
Here's how the operation allegedly worked: Gong and his associates bought Nvidia chips through intermediaries and straw purchasers, claiming the hardware was destined for U.S. or third-country customers. The chips were then shipped to multiple U.S. warehouses, where workers peeled off the Nvidia labels and slapped on new ones from what prosecutors believe was a completely fictitious company.
According to prosecutors, Gong and his team worked with staff at a Hong Kong-based logistics firm and a China-based AI technology company to circumvent U.S. export restrictions. In a separate complaint, Yuan allegedly coordinated people to inspect the relabeled chips on behalf of the Hong Kong logistics operation. He reportedly instructed inspectors to conceal the chips' true destination and concoct a cover story in case U.S. authorities intercepted the shipment.
The Justice Department believes this smuggling ring has been running since at least November 2023.
A Complicated Political Backdrop
The timing of these arrests is particularly interesting. President Donald Trump recently confirmed that Nvidia can export its H200 chips to approved customers in China and other countries, while keeping its more advanced Blackwell and future Rubin chips restricted to the U.S. market. So we're seeing enforcement of old restrictions at the same moment policy is loosening, at least for slightly older chip generations.
This isn't an isolated incident either. The Justice Department recently charged four other individuals, including two American citizens and two Chinese nationals, for conspiring to illegally export restricted Nvidia AI chips to China. Those chips were allegedly routed through Malaysia between October 2024 and January 2025.
China's Push for Tech Independence
Meanwhile, China has been working aggressively to reduce its dependence on U.S. technology. In October 2025, China reportedly launched a sweeping customs crackdown targeting Nvidia's AI chips, particularly the H20 and RTX Pro 6000D models that were specifically designed to comply with U.S. export controls.
These cases highlight the intensifying tech competition between the U.S. and China, with Nvidia squarely in the middle of the geopolitical struggle. How these prosecutions play out could shape not just U.S.-China relations, but the entire trajectory of the global technology industry.