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Monday, December 1, 2025

Chinese scientist who smuggled dangerous ‘vomitoxin’ fungus into US deported

 A Chinese researcher who smuggled a crop-killing fungus dubbed “vomitoxin” into the US has been deported, officials announced Monday.

Yunqing Jian, 33, who once worked for the University of Michigan, pleaded guilty last month to conspiring to smuggle the biological pathogen into the States, reportedly to continue researching it, and then lying to the FBI about her actions. She was sentenced to time served — then booted.

FBI Director Dan Bongino confirmed Monday in a post on X that Jian has been kicked out of the country after her conviction.

Chinese researcher Yunqing Jian has been deported after she admitted to a scheme to smuggle a crop-killing fungus into the US to allegedly study.AP

“Yunqing Jian, a citizen of the People’s Republic of China, pleaded guilty to charges of smuggling a DANGEROUS biological pathogen into our country and then lying about it to FBI agents, and was DEPORTED,” Bongino wrote.

“The FBI will not stand by and allow our foreign adversaries to exploit our top-notch university facilities in furtherance of their agendas.”

Jian was arrested in June for allegedly plotting with her boyfriend Zungyong Liu to bring into the US the fungus, called Fusarium graminearum, which causes “head blight” that kills wheat, barley, maize and rice.

The fungus is nicknamed “vomitoxin” for its effect also causing livestock to throw up. It can cause other issues, too, such diarrhea, stomach pain, headaches and fevers in both animals and people.

Jian, a loyal member of the Chinese Communist Party, had received funding from her home country to research the fungus, prosecutors said.

Jian and her boyfriend allegedly plotted to bring fungus Fusarium graminearum into the US to study at the University of Michigan.US District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan

Liu, 34, worked at a Chinese university that was studying the pathogen when he brought some in his backpack on a flight into the US, through the Detroit Metropolitan Airport, so he could research it further at the University of Michigan where Jian was working.

But Liu was turned away at the airport in July and sent back to China when he was found to be carrying a suspicious red plant material in his backpack.

Messages the couple exchanged in 2024 suggest that Jian was already working with the fungus at the Michigan lab before Liu was caught trying to come in with it.

The fungus can kill crops and make livestock and humans sick.US District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan

The fungus grows in the US in places in the East and Upper Midwest and is responsible for an estimated loss of $200 million to $400 million in destroyed agriculture each year.



It’s not uncommon for researchers to bring plants, animals and strains of fungus from other countries into the US but they have to get a permit first.

Jian’s lawyer, Norman Zalkind, told The Post Monday that his client was sent back to China two days after she entered her guilty plea and said the feds blew her crimes out of proportion.

“They shouldn’t have brought these kinds of cases, they are not serious cases,” Zalkind said.

“The administration made them much more serious than they really are. They said their research was really harmful to the US, but it wasn’t.”

At least four other Chinese nationals have been similarly charged with trying to sneak into the country biological materials for research at the University of Michigan.

https://nypost.com/2025/12/01/us-news/chinese-scientist-who-smuggled-dangerous-vomitoxin-fungus-into-us-has-been-deported/

Treasury, House panel launch probes of Walz handling of $1B food aid fraud, could mean criminal referrals

 A powerful US House committee and the Treasury Department both launched investigations into Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz’s involvement in a “massive fraud” scheme that involved Somali immigrants bilking more than $1 billion from taxpayers, they revealed Monday.

House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (R-Ky.) told The Post that his panel “will conduct a thorough investigation into Governor Walz’s failure to safeguard taxpayer dollars” as a result.

“Minnesota Governor Tim Walz was warned about massive fraud in a pandemic food-aid program for children, yet he failed to act. Instead, whistleblowers who raised concerns faced retaliation,” Comer said.

House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (R-Ky.) told The Post that his panel “will conduct a thorough investigation into Governor Walz’s failure to safeguard taxpayer dollars” as a result.Michael Brochstein/ZUMA / SplashNews.com

“Because of Governor Walz’s negligence, criminals — including Somali terrorists — stole nearly $1 billion from the program while children suffered.”

As chairman of the powerful GOP-led panel, Comer can issue subpoenas and refer alleged crimes to the Department of Justice for potential criminal prosecution.

The DOJ has already convicted 59 fraudsters in the scheme.

Also on Monday, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent posted on X that he had instructed his investigators to dig into how “the feckless mismanagement of the Biden Administration and Governor Tim Walz” allowed tax dollars to be funneled to Al-Shabaab terrorists.

The revelations about the scale of the $1 billion fraud for a COVID-era food relief program are new — as is the claim that some of the money flowed back to the Somali terrorist organization.

But House Republicans have been onto Walz and Minnesota over its leaky aid programs for months.

Last year, Republicans on the House Education and Workforce Committee issued a subpoena to Walz for records, though it’s unclear what information — if any — his office provided. A rep for that panel didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

As chairman of the powerful GOP-led panel, Comer can issue subpoenas and refer potential crimes to the Department of Justice, which has already convicted 59 fraudsters linked to the Feeding Our Future scheme.AP

The House Oversight probe comes following prosecutions of 78 scammers, often from Somalia, who took Minnesota taxpayers’ money as part of what the feds have called the Feeding Our Future fraud scandal.

The ploy, according to prosecutors, involved funneling money from state social services coffers — including at the Department of Human Services and Department of Education — to the nonprofit Feeding Our Future and other organizations to ostensibly feed school children.

Instead, their “depraved and brazen” plot used the funds to splurge on the lavish lifestyles of the nonprofit’s workers — including for brand new fancy cars and real estate holdings as far away as Turkey and Kenya — between April 2020 and January 2022, prosecutors said.

The House Oversight Committee is investigating a “massive fraud” scheme under Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz that bilked more than $1 billion from taxpayers meant for food aid during the COVID-19 pandemic.REUTERS

The FBI raided the fake nonprofit that same month and it later dissolved. Many of the reimbursement claims from the organizations were sent to state departments and then on to federal agencies such as the USDA.

A whistleblower X account purporting to be 500 employees with Minnesota’s Department of Human Services slammed Walz on Saturday for being “100% responsible” for the fraud.

“We let Tim Walz know of fraud early on, hoping for a partnership in stopping fraud but no, we got the opposite response,” their account posted on Saturday.

“Because of Governor Walz’s negligence, criminals — including Somali terrorists — stole nearly $1 billion from the program while children suffered,” Comer said, referencing payments made to al-Shabaab terrorists.AFP via Getty Images

“Tim Walz systematically retaliated against whistleblowers using monitoring, threats, repression, and did his best to discredit fraud reports. Instead of partnership, we got the full weight of retaliation,” added the account, which was apparently suspended on X Monday.

“It’s scary, isolating and left us wondering who we can turn to.”

The employees claimed that Walz had weakened safeguards, including at the Office of the Legislative Auditor, during the episode.

The FBI raided Feeding Our Future in January 2022 and it later dissolved.Star Tribune via Getty Images

In a June 2024 audit, that office found that the Minnesota Department of Education had “created opportunities for fraud” and maintained “inadequate oversight” during the roughly two-year period it was paying for the fake feeding of schoolchildren.

President Trump slammed Minnesota as effectively “a hub of fraudulent money laundering activity” after recent reports on the extent of the Feeding Our Future scheme.

Walz has boasted that he took “responsibility for putting people in jail” who were connected to the fraud — but also hit Trump in comments to NBC News’ “Meet the Press” that “there’s a big difference between fraud and corruption.”

Fraudsters tried to bribe a juror on a Feeding Our Future fraud case in June 2024.AP

“And corruption is something he knows about,” the Minnesota governor said of the 47th president.

“Donald Trump: Deflect, demonize, come up with no solutions. He’s not going to help fix anything on fraud,” Walz told NBC News’ “Meet the Press” in an interview that aired Sunday. “My God, there’s a big difference between fraud and corruption. And corruption is something he knows about.”

The 61-year-old governor, who is currently running for a third term in office, told the Minnesota Reformer that he was aware of suspicious activity by the nonprofit as early as November 2020. Minnesota’s Department of Education first moved to stop payments to Feeding Our Future at the time.

Walz later awarded a fraudster from another nonprofit linked to the scheme with an “Outstanding Refugee Award” in July 2021.AP

But Walz let the payments flow again after Feeding Our Future sued the department for alleged racial discrimination.

When federal indictments began being handed up, Walz further told media outlets that he attempted to put a stop to the fraud in April 2021, before blaming a Minnesota judge for ordering the funds to continue flowing.

That jurist, Ramsey County District Judge John Guthmann, fired back in a rare statement that none of those payments were made due to a court order and were, in fact, “made voluntarily” after Feeding Our Future claimed it had resolved “serious deficiencies” that caused the suspension in state spending.

Walz later awarded a fraudster from another nonprofit linked to the scheme with an “Outstanding Refugee Award” in July 2021.

Reps for Walz’s office did not respond to a request for comment.

https://nypost.com/2025/12/01/us-news/treasury-house-panel-launch-probes-into-tim-walzs-handling-of-1b-food-aid-fraud/