Super Micro board shakeup
A Super Micro co‑founder resigned after U.S. charges alleged a scheme to smuggle NVIDIA AI chips to China through rerouted shipments — the move underscores rising legal risk in cross‑border chip flows. The resignation follows an indictment that federal authorities say exposed a sophisticated diversion channel for restricted hardware. (latestly.com)
An indictment unsealed March 19, 2026, names Yih‑Shyan “Wally” Liaw, Ruei‑Tsang “Steven” Chang and Ting‑Wei “Willy” Sun and alleges a conspiracy to divert U.S.‑assembled servers integrating controlled AI technology to China. (justice.gov)) Federal filings say Liaw and Sun were arrested and will be presented in the Northern District of California, while Chang remains at large. (justice.gov)) Prosecutors allege the scheme used false paperwork, staged “dummy” non‑working servers for inspections, and repackaging/transshipment through a Southeast Asian pass‑through to obscure China as the end destination. (justice.gov)) The indictment quantifies the channel’s scale as roughly $2.5 billion in purchases since 2024 and identifies approximately $510 million worth of U.S.‑assembled servers diverted in a three‑week span between late April and mid‑May 2025. (justice.gov)) Court documents charge the three with conspiring to violate the Export Control Reform Act and with counts of conspiring to smuggle goods and to defraud the United States, with the ECRA count carrying up to a 20‑year statutory maximum. (media.washtimes.com)) Supermicro announced the immediate appointment of DeAnna Luna as acting chief compliance officer and contemporaneously said it placed implicated employees on administrative leave and ended its relationship with the contractor named in the indictment. (ir.supermicro.com)) Market reaction wiped billions of shareholder value as Supermicro shares plunged about 33% on the day the indictment was unsealed, a move analysts said erased roughly $6 billion in market capitalization. (cnbc.com))