Couple Convicted of Theft of Biotech Trade Secrets from Genentech; JHL Biotech Founders Face Similar Charges

A federal investigation of the theft of biotech trade secrets has resulted in the convictions of two people and charges against two others.

A former principal scientist at Genentech, the South San Francisco-based biotech corporation, pleaded guilty July 7 with her husband in federal court to conspiracy and other charges related to the theft of trade secrets from the company.

In addition, a federal grand jury has indicted the co-founders of JHL Biotech Inc. with conspiracy to steal trade secrets and several other charges.

The convictions and charges were announced Wednesday by the office of Stephanie Hinds, acting U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of California.

In plea agreements, Xanthe Lam and Allen Lam acknowledge they conspired to steal confidential, proprietary and trade secret information from Genentech beginning in 2009, and share it with JHL Biotech Inc., a biopharmaceutical startup now called Eden Biologics Inc., headquartered in Zhubei, Taiwan, with offices in Wuhan, China, and Rancho Santa Fe in Southern California.

Their convictions follow three years of cooperation with a federal investigation of thefts of trade “This United States Attorney's Office will always aggressively prosecute theft of corporate trade secrets to protect innovation, a crown jewel of our District,” Hinds said.

In the related legal action, the grand jury indictment charges 73-year-old Racho Jordanov, the co-founder and former CEO of JHL Biotech, and 72-year-old Rose Lin (also known as Rose Sweihorn Tong), another of the company's co-founders and former chief operating officer, with conspiracy to commit trade secret theft and wire fraud, international money laundering and related charges including obstruction of justice.

The charges allege that Lin recruited the Lams in 2009 to provide confidential documents they stole from Genentech that provided JHL with accelerated product development and other means to gain competitive advantages and raise its purported value to more than $900 million.

The indictment also alleges that Jordanov and Lin used the stolen information to defraud investors of more than $100 million.

“According to the indictment, JHL Biotech was a nearly $1 billion Taiwanese unicorn built on a foundation of lies,” Hinds said. “This kind of complex intellectual property theft and fraud not only harms victims, it threatens the intellectual property of an industry with strategic importance to the United States.”

 

 

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