According to the indictment, Arc
Electronics told its US suppliers that the microelectronics technologies
were intended for use in various types of streetlights. But in reality,
said the FBI, the company gave the hi-tech supplies to the Russian
Ministry of Defense for use in airborne surveillance systems, as well as
in remote weapons guidance systems, among other military applications.
Federal prosecutors said that, for over four years, Arc Electronics
engaged in a prolonged “surreptitious and systematic” scheme to
circumvent US government export controls, thus seriously damaging US
national security. Following the early-morning raids, the FBI unsealed
indictments against 11 Arc Electronics employees, most of whom were
charged with “acting as unregistered agents of the Russian Federation in
the United States” —legal jargon for espionage.
Fishenko, who is originally from
Kazakhstan, was scheduled to face trial on September 21 in New York. But
on Wednesday he chose to plead guilty
to the charges leveled against him. He is the fifth member of the 11
Apex System employees arrested back in 2012 to plead guilty to
espionage. A government spokesman said the Fishenko’s plea did not
result from an agreement to cooperate with the FBI. He now faces up to
15 years in prison. His lawyer, Richard Levitt, declined comment when he
was contacted on Wednesday. The Russian government has denied that it had any involvement with Fishenko’s operations.
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