Supermicro’s co-founder was just accused of smuggling $2.5 billion in GPUs to China | Fortune
Federal prosecutors say a Supermicro co-founder helped run an elaborate transshipment-and-fake-document scheme to divert U.S.-assembled AI servers into China, highlighting how export controls can fail inside complex supply chains.
Sources
Summary
Federal agents arrested Supermicro co-founder and board member Yih-Shyan “Wally” Liaw after prosecutors unsealed an indictment alleging a multi-year scheme to divert billions in AI servers to China in violation of U.S. export controls. The story frames the case as both a dramatic smuggling plot and a broader indictment of Supermicro’s governance, but key claims remain allegations that have not been tested in court and the company itself is not charged. It matters because enforcement here targets not just chips but entire AI-server supply chains—where compliance failures can become a national-security issue and a market-moving corporate risk.
Reality Check
These are criminal allegations in an unsealed indictment, not proven facts, and the case will hinge on evidence and intent (including what the defendants knew about the true end users and destinations).
DOJ’s public statement explicitly says Supermicro is not charged in the indictment, even though the defendants are described as associated with the company and prosecutors allege concealment from compliance functions. (ir.supermicro.com)
The core public record so far is DOJ’s March 19, 2026 announcement: the government is treating “transshipment,” “dummy servers,” and falsified paperwork as alleged tools for evading export controls aimed at restricting advanced AI technology from reaching China. (justice.gov)
Detail
On Thursday, March 19, 2026, DOJ announced an indictment unsealed in federal court charging Yih-Shyan “Wally” Liaw, Ruei-Tsang “Steven” Chang, and Ting-Wei “Willy” Sun with conspiring to divert U.S.-assembled high-performance servers containing controlled AI technology to China. (justice.gov)
DOJ says Liaw and Sun were arrested and would be presented in the Northern District of California; Chang remains a fugitive. (justice.gov)
According to the article text, the alleged pipeline used a purported end buyer in Southeast Asia, transshipment through Taiwan, relabeling/repackaging, and falsified documents to conceal China as the ultimate destination.
DOJ says the alleged scheme included “false documents,” “staged dummy servers to mislead inspectors,” and “convoluted transshipment schemes.” (justice.gov)
Supermicro stated it is not named as a defendant; it placed Liaw and Chang on administrative leave and terminated its relationship with Sun, and said it is cooperating with the investigation. (ir.supermicro.com)
The article text asserts the value involved was about $2.5 billion in servers and describes alleged tactics (e.g., sticker/serial manipulation and dummy servers) that prosecutors say were used to evade compliance checks and government scrutiny.
The article text connects the criminal case to Supermicro’s prior governance/accounting disputes (including auditor turnover and prior regulatory scrutiny) as context for corporate-controls questions, but those issues are separate from the criminal charges described in the indictment.
DOJ quotes SDNY U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton saying the defendants allegedly used “a systematic scheme” to divert “massive quantities” of AI servers to customers in China. (justice.gov)