Chinese cyberactors have claimed that they impersonated The Epoch Times to send threatening emails to multiple federal agencies and the White House.
The attackers notified The Epoch Times of their threats in a Chinese-language email dated Sept. 6 with the subject line “See the screenshots, you are done.”
Three screenshots of the threats were attached to the email; one showed the “Contact Us” form on the White House website, with The Epoch Times’ phone number and email filled in. In a comment littered with exclamation marks, the sender claimed to represent practitioners of Falun Gong, a spiritual community persecuted in China, and threatened violence against the White House.
“We will throw incendiary bombs and explosives! If anyone tries to stop us, we will open fire!” the message states. It then threatened to “simultaneously broadcast this magnificent feat live” on a variety of platforms, including YouTube, The Epoch Times, and its sister media outlet, NTD.
The message claimed that the acts were to be in retaliation for “your failure to help us address the Communist Party’s transnational repression.”
Similar fake threats were allegedly sent to the CIA, the Department of Justice, and the D.C. Metropolitan Police Department.
The impersonator used an Epoch Times email address as the contact email in each of the threatening messages.
“What can you do with me?” the sender wrote in Chinese, claiming to be based in Xi’an, capital of Shaanxi Province in central China.
Huang Wanqing, editor-in-chief of the Chinese-language Epoch Times, said the impersonators’ emails align closely with intimidation tactics carried out by agents of the Chinese Communist Party and its proxies.
“We condemn the perpetrator for trying to create terror,” Huang said in a statement.
A Broader CCP Campaign
The threat emails appear to fit into a broader campaign by the Chinese regime.
The center’s executive director, Levi Browde, expressed concerns that “the regime or its proxies may be plotting a more serious incident, even a violent one, using fake Falun Gong practitioners,” with a goal to “accelerate current tactics to discredit the practice and turn public opinion in the United States and globally against Falun Gong.”
“These are blatant and audacious attempts by Beijing or their proxies to depict practitioners as extreme or irrational. The fact that they would stoop this low in their attempts to malign our faith in the West shows perhaps just how desperate they are,” Browde told The Epoch Times in a statement on Sept. 11.
The Taiwanese Criminal Investigation Bureau said that its multiagency investigation has traced the emails back to Xi’an.