Italy extradites Chinese national accused of running spear-phishing operation against US Covid researchers - first such extradition from Europe to US
Italy extradited Chinese national Xu Zewei to the US on Friday, where he is accused of running a years-long Chinese government-linked spear-phishing campaign that targeted US Covid-19 researchers, universities, and law firms. The case is notable because it's the first time a European country has extradited a Chinese state-linked hacker to the US, and signals tighter coordination between European and US prosecutors on China-attributed cyber operations. Xu was arrested in Milan in July 2024 on a US warrant; Italy's highest court approved the extradition this month after his appeals were exhausted. He could spend decades in US federal prison.
- Check
- If your research, healthcare, or legal organization worked on Covid-related materials, expect renewed targeting from China-linked groups now that one of their operators faces US prosecution.
- Affected
- Universities, research labs, hospitals, and law firms that worked on Covid-19 vaccine development, treatment research, public health policy, or related litigation between 2020 and 2024. Organizations named in the Xu Zewei indictment are at high risk for retaliation. More broadly: any organization holding biomedical research IP, particularly with Chinese researchers in their network.
- Fix
- Brief researchers and legal staff on the spear-phishing pattern: emails from people they actually know asking for documents or login help, with subtle indicators like off-pattern grammar or unusual sender domains. Add MFA to research-data and legal-discovery systems. Monitor outbound transfers of research datasets to unfamiliar destinations. Treat the extradition as a likely catalyst for retaliatory campaigns.