LOS ANGELES
– Two Chinese nationals have been indicted on federal charges that allege they
kidnapped another Chinese national and attempted to collect $2 million in
ransom from the victim’s family in exchange for the victim’s life.
Guangyao
Yang, 25, and Peicheng Shen, 33, whose last known U.S. residences were in West
Covina, were charged in a four-count indictment returned by a federal grand
jury on February 22. The indictment charges the two defendants with conspiracy
to kidnap, kidnapping, attempted extortion in violation of the Hobbs Act, and
threat by foreign communication.
According to
court documents, Shen, using an alias, met the victim, a Santa Ana resident,
several times on the pretense that Shen would help the victim collect a debt
from another individual. During their third meeting, at a San Gabriel shopping
center on July 16, 2018, Shen allegedly kidnapped the victim and then, along
with Yang, held the victim hostage at a house in Corona. At that house, Shen
and Yang allegedly confined the victim by binding his legs together, taping his
eyes shut, restraining his arms behind him, and confining him in a closet.
The day
after the kidnapping, the victim’s father received a demand for a $2 million
ransom in exchange for the victim’s life, with the money to be deposited into
three Chinese bank accounts within three hours, court documents allege. The
victim’s father also received photographs of the victim, who was physically
restrained in a closet, according to court documents.
Investigators believe the victim died during
the course of the kidnapping, and they are seeking the public’s assistance in
locating his body.
The
indictment further alleges that on July 18, defendants Shen and Yang attempted
to conceal evidence of the crime. Specifically, defendants Shen and Yang drove
to the area of Mojave, California, to bury or otherwise dispose of the victim’s
body or other physical evidence involved in the crime. Further, on that same
day, Shen allegedly had the closet of the Corona house re-carpeted. Yang also
performed an Internet search to determine, in effect, how fast a corpse
decomposes in soil, court papers state.
Shen and
Yang currently are believed to be in China.
An
indictment contains allegations that a defendant has committed a crime. Every
defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty beyond a
reasonable doubt.
The two
kidnapping-related charges carry a statutory maximum penalty of life in federal
prison. The extortion and threat by foreign communication charges each carry a
statutory maximum penalty of 20 years in prison.
The
investigation into the kidnapping and extortion is being conducted by the
Federal Bureau of Investigation.
This case is
being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Julia Choe of the Cyber
and Intellectual Property Crimes Section and Special Assistant United States
Attorney Ryan Adams of the General Crimes Section.
The FBI is
seeking information regarding the suspects charged in this case and to
determine the whereabouts of the victim. While search efforts are focused in
the Mojave Desert, the FBI would like to hear from anyone who may have
information about this alleged crime or about associated suspicious activity.
Anyone with information may call the FBI’s Los Angeles Field Office at (310)
477-6565.
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