Taiwan jails ex-TSMC engineer in trade secrets case

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Chen Li-ming, a former TSMC and Tokyo Electron employee at the Intellectual Property and Commercial Court for the verdict in a trade secrets case.

Chen Li-ming, a former TSMC and Tokyo Electron employee, at the Intellectual Property and Commercial Court for the verdict in a trade secrets case.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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Taipei - A Taiwan court sentenced a former employee of chipmaking giant TSMC to 10 years in prison on April 27 for stealing trade secrets to benefit his later workplace, the local subsidiary of Tokyo Electron.

TSMC is the world’s largest contract semiconductor chip manufacturer and makes cutting-edge chips for Nvidia and Apple.

Chen Li-ming, an engineer who joined the Japanese company after leaving TSMC, was convicted of using his ties with former colleagues to help Tokyo Electron – already a major supplier of chipmaking equipment for the Taiwanese giant – compete for more contracts.

Taiwan’s Intellectual Property and Commercial Court found Chen had obtained trade secrets “in pursuit of his personal job performance”, sentencing him to 10 years behind bars for violations of the National Security Act and the Trade Secrets Act.

His actions created “risks to TSMC’s trade secrets and Taiwan’s economic security”, the court said in a statement.

Three people who worked for TSMC at the time also received sentences in the case, ranging from two to six years.

Tokyo Electron’s Taiwan entity was ordered to pay TSMC NT$100 million (S$4.05 million) and fined another NT$50 million.

A Tokyo Electron employee, convicted of destroying evidence after deleting image files copied by Chen, received a 10-month suspended term, the court said.

The court said Tokyo Electron had “failed to properly fulfil its corporate social responsibility in supervising its employees”.

The company previously said it had sacked Chen.

In a statement following the verdict, Tokyo Electron said they “take the court’s finding with the utmost seriousness”, stressing the investigation had found no evidence of organisational involvement.

The company added that the trade secrets obtained by Chen had not been disclosed to any third party, and pledged measures to enhance oversight of its information management system.

During the investigation, TSMC said in a statement that Tokyo Electron Taiwan was not a competitor, and that the trade secrets obtained by Chen were not disclosed to any third party. AFP

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