This website collects cookies to deliver better user experience. Cookie Policy
Accept
Sign In
The Wall Street Publication
  • Home
  • Trending
  • U.S
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Real Estate
    • Markets
    • Personal Finance
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Style
    • Arts
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Reading: Chinese Investment in U.S. Plane Maker Draws FBI, National-Security Reviews
Share
The Wall Street PublicationThe Wall Street Publication
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • Home
  • Trending
  • U.S
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Real Estate
    • Markets
    • Personal Finance
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Style
    • Arts
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2024 The Wall Street Publication. All Rights Reserved.
The Wall Street Publication > Blog > Business > Chinese Investment in U.S. Plane Maker Draws FBI, National-Security Reviews
Business

Chinese Investment in U.S. Plane Maker Draws FBI, National-Security Reviews

Editorial Board Published January 18, 2022
Share
Chinese Investment in U.S. Plane Maker Draws FBI, National-Security Reviews
SHARE

The FBI and a U.S. investment-screening panel are investigating a Chinese investment in an aircraft startup following allegations of improper technology transfer to China, according to people familiar with the matter and documents reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.

Contents
SHARE YOUR THOUGHTSNewsletter Sign-upIn Today’s Paper

Under review is a Chinese government-backed investment company’s nearly 47% stake—the largest of any shareholder—in Icon Aircraft Inc., a California-based maker of small recreational, amphibious planes. A group of U.S. shareholders has accused the Chinese firm of hollowing out Icon and moving its technology, which the Americans say has possible military applications, to China.

The Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S., an interagency panel that can recommend that the president block or unwind deals on national-security grounds, began its review in late November after the American shareholders urged it to intervene, according to documents and the people familiar with the matter.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation has also initiated a separate probe into possible criminal violations related to the deal and the alleged transfer of technology, according to the people and one of the documents.

The review by Cfius underscores its heightened scrutiny on investment from China amid hostile U.S.-China relations and the two governments’ battle to dominate technologies they see as crucial to future economic and military competitiveness.

The U.S. wants to counter China’s influence around the world by providing everything from infrastructure to vaccines and green energy. WSJ’s Stu Woo explains how the plan, dubbed Build Back Better World, aims to compete with China’s Belt and Road Initiative. Photo composite: Daniel Orton

Shanghai Pudong Science and Technology Investment Co., or PDSTI, said in legal filings that its investment in Icon saved it from collapse and that licensing its technology to a Chinese company will bring in needed capital. A person close to PDSTI said the American shareholders’ call for a Cfius review is “an example of how the Cfius process can be improperly weaponized against a good-faith investor.”

A lawyer for Icon said its aircraft don’t have military applications and the company doesn’t see PDSTI’s investment as a national-security concern. The company is fully cooperating with Cfius and expects the panel to conclude its review at the end of February, the lawyer said.

A spokeswoman for the Treasury Department, which leads Cfius, declined to comment as did the FBI. The lawyer for Icon and representatives for PDSTI said they haven’t been contacted by the FBI.

Icon, founded in 2006 by a former Air Force pilot and a former product-design lecturer at Stanford University, produces a carbon-fiber plane with foldable wings capable of land and water takeoffs and landings, according to the American shareholders. The plane is designed for recreational use, said Icon’s website. The American shareholders, in a memo to Cfius reviewed by the Journal, said the aircraft could be modified to function as a militarized drone.

Icon attracted board members influential in aviation. One was Linden Blue, vice chairman of General Atomics, which makes the Predator drones used by the U.S. military. Phil Condit, a former CEO of Boeing Co., also joined the board and is an investor.

SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS

What steps should the U.S. take to protect cutting-edge technology? Join the conversation below.

The group of American shareholders that appealed to Cfius includes Mr. Condit, Icon’s co-founders Kirk Hawkins and Steen Strand, and multiple investment firms. Mr. Hawkins remains a board member.

In their memo to Cfius, the group said Icon initially didn’t seek the panel’s blessing because PDSTI’s investment started out small in 2015. The memo cited Cfius’s approval of a 2011 deal by China’s state-owned aviation giant China Aviation Industry Corp, known as AVIC, to buy Minnesota-based private-aircraft maker Cirrus Industries Inc.

By 2017, PDSTI had amassed its dominant stake in Icon, according to the group of American shareholders. Then, they said in the memo and in court filings, the Chinese company began installing board members and executives, pressuring others and laying plans to transfer Icon’s technology to China.

The Americans filed suit against PDSTI in Delaware in June seeking to stop its alleged expropriation of Icon’s technology; PDSTI said the lawsuit’s claims are meritless. Two months later the American shareholders filed their memo to Cfius, urging the panel to unwind the deal.

Messrs. Condit and Blue resigned from Icon’s board in 2018 and 2019, respectively, to protest PDSTI’s management, according to the June lawsuit. In his resignation letter, cited in the suit, Mr. Condit said he was stepping down, given “the complete disregard for my advice and counsel.”


Newsletter Sign-up

In Today’s Paper

A complete list, with links, of every article from the day’s Journal.


In May 2020, then-senior Icon executive David Crook declined PDSTI’s offer to be the aircraft company’s president. He wrote, “It is obvious that PDSTI’s plan for ICON is to reduce its operations to a minimum and destroy any potential for the US business until they can move it to China to serve their own interest,” according to a filing by the plaintiffs in the Delaware suit. Mr. Crook, who isn’t part of the American shareholders group suing PDSTI, said he stands by that comment.

Nearly a year later, in March 2021, PDSTI shipped an Icon plane to China, and in April the firm began a process to license Icon’s intellectual property, which will give it “rights to siphon ICON technology back to China with no restrictions,” the shareholders allege in their memo to Cfius.

In that memo, dated Aug. 1, the minority shareholders said that the situation had developed into “specifically the kind of national security situation” for which the Cfius process is intended.

“ICON’s aircraft technology and advanced materials and aerospace manufacturing capabilities should not be allowed to fall into the hands” of China, said the memo. “Without expeditious CFIUS intervention, this may occur within months.”

Icon’s lawyer said the company’s sole plane model, called the A5, is built from commercial, off-the-shelf products and is “wholly unsuited for any military applications.” The A5 “does not have any autonomous piloting, artificial intelligence or machine learning capabilities,” the lawyer said, adding that Icon doesn’t manufacture, design, develop, or test navigation technology or advanced materials.

PDSTI has said in filings in the Delaware lawsuit that, while it has the ability to appoint the majority of Icon’s board, it too is a minority stockholder with a 46.7% stake and doesn’t exercise corporate control over Icon. PDSTI has invested “hundreds of millions of dollars” in Icon since 2015 and secured more funding from outside investors, thereby saving Icon from collapse under prior “disastrous leadership,” according to the filings.

—Jim Oberman and Elisa Cho contributed to this article.

Write to Kate O’Keeffe at kathryn.okeeffe@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

TAGGED:Business NewsPAIDWall Street Publication
Share This Article
Twitter Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Offices Are Leased Up, Thanks to Cash Gifts for Tenants, Months of Free Rent Offices Are Leased Up, Thanks to Cash Gifts for Tenants, Months of Free Rent
Next Article Beijing 2022 Olympics Mobile App Is Marred by Security Flaws, Researchers Say Beijing 2022 Olympics Mobile App Is Marred by Security Flaws, Researchers Say

Editor's Pick

Heidi Montag Explains Carrying That Terrible Wig to the AMAs

Heidi Montag Explains Carrying That Terrible Wig to the AMAs

Studying Time: 2 minutes Heidi Montag has some explaining to do. On the 2025 American Music Awards, there have been…

By Editorial Board 3 Min Read
The Landscape of International Trade in 2025: Constant Evolution and Strategic Shifts
The Landscape of International Trade in 2025: Constant Evolution and Strategic Shifts

The international trade landscape is in constant flux, and the year 2025…

3 Min Read
Finding Voice Through Silence: The Story of OR GOLAN
Finding Voice Through Silence: The Story of OR GOLAN

In a world where expression is often taken for granted, finding one’s…

6 Min Read

Oponion

Democrats fume over Alito-Trump name

Democrats fume over Alito-Trump name

Senate Democrats are livid that President-elect Trump has reached out…

January 11, 2025

Katie Cassidy Breaks Silence on Boyfriend Liam Payne’s Dying

Liam Payne’s girlfriend has spoken out…

October 18, 2024

Meta to Pay $725 Million to Settle Cambridge Analytica Lawsuit

TechSuit stems from revelations that the…

December 23, 2022

Okta Says Hundreds of Its Customers May Have Been Caught In Hack

HONG KONG— Okta Inc., one of…

March 23, 2022

10 folks shot at vacation weekend celebration on boat in Little River, South Carolina

LITTLE RIVER, S.C. — Ten folks…

May 26, 2025

You Might Also Like

Silicon Labs and Wirepas Surpass 10 Million Chipsets, Powering Industrial IoT at Scale
Business

Silicon Labs and Wirepas Surpass 10 Million Chipsets, Powering Industrial IoT at Scale

Silicon Labs and Wirepas at the moment introduced they've shipped 10 million wi-fi SoCs working Wirepas’ RF mesh connectivity software…

3 Min Read
Kinéis launches its companies and expands in Asia with WMG Restricted
Business

Kinéis launches its companies and expands in Asia with WMG Restricted

Kinéis, operator of the primary world constellation devoted to the IoT, at this time pronounces the official launch of its…

4 Min Read
Omnispace, Gatehouse Satcom and Nordic Semiconductor Exhibit 5G NB-IoT Functionality over Non-Geostationary S-band Satellite tv for pc
Business

Omnispace, Gatehouse Satcom and Nordic Semiconductor Exhibit 5G NB-IoT Functionality over Non-Geostationary S-band Satellite tv for pc

Omnispace, Gatehouse Satcom, and Nordic Semiconductor, at the moment introduced the profitable demonstration of a 5G narrowband Web of Issues…

3 Min Read
74% of asset monitoring initiatives meet or exceed ROI expectations
Business

74% of asset monitoring initiatives meet or exceed ROI expectations

Companies adopting IoT asset monitoring options prioritize wonderful vendor help and seamless integration capabilities over an intensive checklist of options,…

2 Min Read
The Wall Street Publication

About Us

The Wall Street Publication, a distinguished part of the Enspirers News Group, stands as a beacon of excellence in journalism. Committed to delivering unfiltered global news, we pride ourselves on our trusted coverage of Politics, Business, Technology, and more.

Company

  • About Us
  • Newsroom Policies & Standards
  • Diversity & Inclusion
  • Careers
  • Media & Community Relations
  • WP Creative Group
  • Accessibility Statement

Contact

  • Contact Us
  • Contact Customer Care
  • Advertise
  • Licensing & Syndication
  • Request a Correction
  • Contact the Newsroom
  • Send a News Tip
  • Report a Vulnerability

Term of Use

  • Digital Products Terms of Sale
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Settings
  • Submissions & Discussion Policy
  • RSS Terms of Service
  • Ad Choices

© 2024 The Wall Street Publication. All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?