U.S. Department of Justice United States Attorney Northern District of Illinois
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── Zachary T. Fardon
Everett McKinley Dirksen Federal Courthouse
TEXAS HONEY BROKER SENTENCED TO THREE YEARS IN PRISON FOR AVOIDING $37.9 MILLION IN TARIFFS ON CHINESE-ORIGIN HONEY
CHICAGO — A Texas honey broker was sentenced today to three years in federal prison
for illegally brokering the sale of hundreds of container loads of Chinese-origin honey, which
was misrepresented as originating from India or Malaysia, to avoid anti-dumping duties when it
entered the United States. The defendant, JUN YANG, pleaded guilty in March to facilitating
illegal honey imports by falsely declaring that the honey originated in countries other than China
to avoid $37.9 million in anti-dumping duties.
Yang, 40, of Houston, operated National Honey, Inc., which did business as National
Commodities Company in Houston, and brokered the sale of honey between overseas honey
suppliers and domestic customers. He was ordered to begin serving his sentence on Jan. 15,
2014, by U.S. District Judge Charles Kocoras, who cited the “inescapable harm” to the U.S.
honey industry in imposing the sentence.
Yang has already paid financial penalties totaling $2.89 million to the government,
including a maximum fine of $250,000, mandatory restitution of $97,625, and agreed restitution
“This is a significant sentence against a perpetrator of one of the largest food fraud
schemes uncovered in U.S. history,” said Gary Hartwig, Special Agent-in-Charge of HSI
Chicago. “Unbeknownst to Yang, he was dealing with an undercover HSI agent who was one
step ahead of his illegal activities. Together with our partners at Customs and Border Protection,
we will continue to protect American industries from deceptive import practices, while
facilitating the lawful flow of goods across our borders that is so critical to the U.S. economy.”
According to court documents, Yang caused transportation companies to deliver to U.S.
honey processors and distributors 778 container loads of honey, which were falsely declared at
the time of importation as being from Malaysia or India, knowing that all or some of the honey
had actually originated in China. As a result, the honey, which had an aggregate declared value
of nearly $23 million when it entered the country, avoided anti-dumping duties and honey
assessments totaling more than $37.9 million.
In addition, Yang admitted that he sold purported Vietnamese honey that tested positive
for the presence of Chloramphenicol, an antibiotic not allowed in honey or other food products.
After learning of the unfavorable test results, Yang obtained new test results that purported to
show that the honey was not adulterated, and he instructed the undercover agent to destroy the
unfavorable test results. This adulterated honey was seized by the government.
The sentence was announced by Mr. Hartwig and Zachary T. Fardon, United States
Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois.
Yang was among a group of individuals and companies who were charged in February of
this year in the second phase of an investigation led by agents of U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement’s (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations (HSI). See:
http://www.justice.gov/usao/iln/pr/chicago/2013/pr0220_02.html
In December 2001, the Commerce Department determined that Chinese-origin honey was
being sold in the United States at less than fair market value, and imposed anti-dumping duties.
The duties were as high as 221 percent of the declared value, and later were assessed against the
entered net weight, currently at $2.63 per net kilogram, in addition to a “honey assessment fee”
of one cent per pound of all honey. In October 2002, the Food and Drug Administration issued
an import alert for honey containing the antibiotic Chloramphenicol, a broad spectrum antibiotic
that is used to treat serious infections in humans, but which is not approved for use in honey.
Honey containing certain antibiotics is deemed “adulterated” within the meaning of federal food
In 2008, federal authorities began investigating allegations involving circumventing anti-
dumping duties through illegal imports, including transshipment and mislabeling, on the “supply
side” of the honey industry. The second phase of the investigation involved the illegal buying,
processing, and trading of honey that illegally entered the U.S. on the “demand side” of the
The government is being represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Andrew S. Boutros.
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