Enter your email address below and subscribe to our newsletter

Taiwan arrests three suspected of smuggling Nvidia chips to China

Share your love

  • Taiwan’s Keelung District Prosecutors Office detained three people last week for allegedly falsifying documents to export Nvidia chip-equipped Super Micro 10.37% servers to China via Japan, Bloomberg reported.bloomberg
  • Authorities seized about 50 servers, but at least one shipment had already cleared customs and reached Hong Kong, a known transit point for mainland China.reddit
  • The case follows a March U.S. DOJ indictment alleging $2.5 billion in illegal AI tech transfers to China and growing pressure on allies to enforce export controls.reuters

Taiwan Suspects Nvidia Chips Smuggled to China via Japan

Taiwan prosecutors suspect three individuals smuggled at least one shipment of Nvidia AI chips to China by first routing them through Japan, in what marks the island’s first public crackdown on chip diversion to the mainland.

Detention and Seizure

The trio was detained last week by Taiwan’s Keelung District Prosecutors Office for allegedly falsifying export documents related to Super Micro Computer servers containing advanced Nvidia chips, according to Bloomberg, which first reported the story on May 27. Authorities also seized approximately 50 servers for which the suspects allegedly prepared fraudulent paperwork.bloomberg

However, at least one shipment had already cleared Taiwan customs, according to people familiar with the matter who requested anonymity. That shipment was sent to Japan before eventually reaching Hong Kong, a known transit point for equipment headed to mainland China.reddit

Export Control Violations

The United States has barred the sale of advanced AI chips to China without a license from Washington since October 2022. The suspects were allegedly aware that Super Micro AI servers were heavily regulated by U.S. law and prohibited from being sold to China, Hong Kong, or Macau, according to a statement from the Keelung prosecutors. To pursue “substantial illegal gains,” the defendants purportedly colluded to acquire the servers in Taiwan and declare them for export using falsified documentation, prosecutors said.reuters

The case comes months after the U.S. Department of Justice in March accused three individuals linked to Super Micro, including its co-founder, of facilitating the illegal transfer of at least $2.5 billion worth of U.S. AI technology to China.reuters

Broader Enforcement Push

The Taiwan investigation represents part of a growing enforcement effort amid years of U.S. pressure on allies to curtail China’s access to advanced computing technology. In March 2026, the U.S. Congress approved the Chip Security Act, which would embed tracking technology directly into chips to verify their physical location and ownership after export. The legislation, if enacted, would shift enforcement away from reliance on export licensing paperwork toward hardware-level tracking.bisi

The case also fits a broader pattern of AI chip smuggling through shell companies, falsified compliance audits, and intermediaries across Asia.bisi

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Stay informed and not overwhelmed, subscribe now!