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August, 31, 2022



The Honorable Joseph R. Biden Jr. President of the United States The White House 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW Washington, D.C. 20500



The Honorable Dick Durbin, Chairman Committee on the Judiciary United States Senate 711 Hart Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510



The Honorable Chuck Grassley, Ranking Member Committee on the Judiciary United States Senate 135 Hart Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510




Dear President Biden, Chairman Durbin, and Ranking Member Grassley:


We are board and staff members of API Middle Tennessee, an Asian and Pacific Islander advocacy nonprofit based in Nashville, Tennessee. The principal purpose of our organization is to work towards racial justice by building API community, lifting API voices, and celebrating API identities in Middle Tennessee.


We are writing to convey our deep concerns about the nomination of Casey T. Arrowood to be United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Tennessee. Our reservations are primarily based on last year’s overzealous prosecution of Professor Anming Hu of the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.


Professor Hu’s case garnered significant media attention because it was the first to go to trial within the purview of the Department of Justice’s so-called “China Initiative.” The case received further attention when it was revealed at the June 2021 trial that the investigation, surveillance, and prosecution were based on flimsy and even falsified evidence. Thankfully, Professor Hu has since been vindicated through both a jury mistrial and an acquittal upon retrial in September 2021 from U.S. District Judge Thomas A. Varlan. Although an absolute miscarriage of justice was ultimately avoided in this case, Professor Hu and his family have suffered reputational, financial, and emotional damage throughout this multiyear ordeal.


Federal prosecutors and law enforcement agents wield immense power and authority. They must take pains to ensure that investigations and prosecutions are conducted based on evidence and integrity. Prosecutors, in particular, are held to heightened ethical standards due to their public responsibilities and their duty to serve the public interest. This includes “pursuing appropriate criminal charges of appropriate severity, and by exercising discretion to not pursue criminal charges in appropriate circumstances.” In executing their functions, prosecutors should respect the constitutional rights of all parties. They should not be motivated by improper bias or political or personal considerations such as career advancement when exercising prosecutorial discretion. If their conduct fails to meet basic standards, they do a disservice to defendants and risk undermining the public’s confidence in institutions and due process.


The DOJ’s China Initiative was launched in November 2018 under former Attorney General Jeff Sessions. The stated purpose was to counter economic espionage. Despite accusations of spying and theft of trade secrets, most of the charges of academics have been for wire fraud or false statements. While the program claimed to be free from racial biases, an MIT analysis of China Initiative cases revealed that 90 percent of defendants have been of Chinese descent. Although protecting our national security is of utmost importance, prosecutions must be based on facts and evidence. In the words of Representative Judy Chu, Chair of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus, “Instead of the normal process of beginning with a crime and searching for a suspect, the FBI has, through its China Initiative, started with racially profiled suspects and searched for a crime.”


In the case of Anming Hu, the record reflects that the lead FBI agent initiated his probe based on a Google translation of a Chinese website. Despite nearly two years of secret surveillance of Professor Hu and his son, the government failed to find any evidence of espionage. Rather than re-evaluating the strength of their case, the government, including Assistant U.S. Attorney Casey Arrowood, decided to prosecute Professor Hu for alleged grant fraud. At trial, the lead FBI agent testified that he met with UT Knoxville administrators and misled them to believe Professor Hu had connections to the Chinese military, which resulted in Professor Hu’s termination. In closing arguments, Arrowood argued that Hu “intentionally hid his ties to China to further his career.” However, jurors could not reach a verdict and the court declared a mistrial. Rather than dismissing a case built upon insinuation and falsified evidence, Casey Arrowood’s office chose to retry Professor Hu in what appeared to have been an attempt to justify its lengthy and expensive investigation.


The prosecution of Hu’s case raised concerns of racial profiling, academic freedom, and the criminalization of routine research collaboration. In the end, U.S. District Judge Varlan acquitted Professor Hu of all charges, noting that “even viewing all the evidence in the light most favorable to the government, no rational jury could conclude that defendant acted with a scheme to defraud NASA[.]”


While we commend the ultimate result in Professor Hu’s case, as well as the ending of the DOJ’s China Initiative program in February 2022, we have reservations over the potential elevation of Assistant U.S. Attorney Casey Arrowood. The U.S. Attorney is a powerful position which impacts the lives of all individuals in the particular district. Prosecutorial discretion must be exercised to ensure the proper use of finite resources and that prosecutions are in the public interest rather than in the single-minded pursuit of winning cases or achieving convictions. While we are admittedly not familiar with the entire body of Casey Arrowood’s work, the overreach and misjudgment involved in Professor Hu’s case give us great pause regarding the impartial and fair administration of justice. We are confident that there are other qualified candidates for U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Tennessee who would help restore, and not risk undermining, the public’s faith in institutions and equal justice.


API Middle Tennessee is dedicated to working toward a community that is safe and welcoming for all individuals. We raise concerns about Professor Hu’s overzealous prosecution and Casey Arrowood’s potential promotion precisely because of the painful history of the targeting of Asians in our nation’s past and present. API individuals have been viewed with suspicion and as perpetual foreigners from the Page Act of 1875 to the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 to the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II to the recent rise in anti-Asian racism and attacks during COVID-19. The targeting of API scientists and academics is another difficult chapter in this history.


Based on the public interest and the essential need for continued faith in our institutions and our democracy, we respectfully ask that the President reconsider the nomination of Casey Arrowood for U.S. Attorney of the Eastern District of Tennessee. Barring that, we ask that the Senate Judiciary Committee seriously reflect upon Arrowood’s suitability for this important role. Targeting individuals based on race or national origin must not be acceptable or rewarded.


Thank you for allowing us the opportunity to voice our concerns about Mr. Arrowood’s nomination. Please do not hesitate to reach out if you have any questions.



On behalf of API Middle Tennessee,


Jing Geng

Board Member


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Download a PDF version of this statement here.


If you want to be engaged, you can sign onto APA Justice's letter here.

 
  • Jun 30, 2022

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To close out Pride Month, we wanted to highlight our Board Treasurer, Binh Ngo. Binh joined the API Middle Tennessee Board at the start of 2022. Check out this interview to learn more about him.


Hi Binh. Could you tell us about yourself?

“My name is Binh Ngo. I came from Sài Gòn, Vietnam to Tennessee in 2011. America blesses me with many wonderful experiences in the last eleven years until now. I enjoy the great education and many beautiful friendships in Middle Tennessee. Growing up as an Asian Gay in a small town called Lebanon, I did overcome many challenges but also received countless love and supports from the LGBT community and allies. I got my Master of Accountancy degree from MTSU in 2020 and became Certified Public Accountant in 2021. I’m currently working as an auditor for PHB accounting firm in Franklin, TN.


What are your thoughts on Nashville's LGBTQ+ and API communities?

I am so happy and excited to see the number of LGBT supporters in Nashville increase significantly every year. I dream one day every place in America, people feel safe and loved for being themselves, so they can live a free and happy life and contribute their best gifts to the community. I spent half of my life in America and another half in Vietnam. I love both countries with all my heart. I want to add my unique Vietnamese culture to make the picture of the US more colorful and interesting, but I also want to adapt to the US culture and live harmoniously with everyone. I think API has been a great resource for the Asian Community to embrace their cultures and improve their quality of life in the US. It has been a great honor to serve as a treasurer for API. I’m looking forward to contributing to API's greater success in the coming years.


What do you want to see in the future?

It has been a great honor to serve as a treasurer for API. I’m looking forward to contributing to API's greater success in the coming years. I dream that cultural differences and language barriers no longer make a division, and everyone respects, accepts, and peacefully supports each other for a healthy and happy community. I’m 25 years old now and I’m still looking for my other half. I dream of a happy family with a handsome husband and cute children. Thank America so much for giving me the hope and opportunities that my dreams can come true soon!


We are grateful for Binh's leadership as we continue making Middle Tennessee a safe and welcoming place for all of our community.

 

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By Kit Canlas, API Middle TN, Founding Board Chair


It’s hard to believe a year has passed since 8 lives were lost in the Atlanta shootings, 6 of whom were Asian women. One of the nuanced aspects of the Asian Pacific Islander (API) woman's experience is the dehumanizing effects of being hyper-sexualized. This was the basis of the mass murder we saw last year. In the aftermath, API Middle TN saw unprecedented attention from the media and community interest in supporting our work as we sprung into action in response. We urge our community not to reduce this support to a moment in history, but to allow it to be the beginning of a long term partnership and movement.


According to NAPAWF’s recently released “State of Safety” report, “In the last 12 months a staggering 74% of AAPI women report personally experiencing racism and/or discrimination, 38% report experiencing sexual harassment, and 12% report experiencing gender and/or race-based physical violence.” As the country's quickest growing ethnic population, these statistics cannot be ignored. The report continues, “The urgent needs of individuals are often met — if they are met at all — by local community-based organizations. In addition to being trusted messengers, these organizations act as “first responders” delivering services, distributing information, and bridging the gap between individuals and critical government programs administered by complex, often inaccessible bureaucracy.”


During women’s history month, celebrating the contributions and achievements women have made over the course of American history is not enough. We must remember the sacrifices made by women, acknowledge the disproportionate discrimination and violence against women, especially women of color, and continue the work toward a more safe, just, and inclusive society. We ask our community to stand with us in honoring the lives lost in Atlanta last year and recognizing the ongoing hate directed at our community, most recently demonstrated in the murder Christina Yuna Lee in New York and the violent attack on an Asian woman in Yonkers.


As violence and discrimination against Asian Pacific Islanders continues, API Middle TN has both the opportunity and responsibility to serve our community. We need resources and people power to continue the work of progressing our mission of racial justice. If you would like to continue supporting our work, you can make a donation here.

 
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