FORMER US MARINE CORPS PILOT ARRESTED IN
AUSTRALIA OVER CHINA LINKS
written by Daniel Croft | October 28, 2022
Australian police
have arrested a former US Marine Corps pilot and flight instructor at the
request of US authorities for his work in China.
Daniel Edmund
Duggan, 54, was arrested on 21 October in Orange, NSW, Australia and appeared
in court on the same day, according to court records, his lawyer, and two
police sources.
Duggan was denied
bail and taken to Bathurst jail. He will appear in court in Sydney in November,
where bail applications will be considered.
The arrest follows
the US and its allies, such as the UK, cracking down on China reaching out
to former military pilots.
A spokesperson from
the Australian Federal Attorney-General’s Department said, “An individual was
arrested on 21 October 2022 pursuant to a request from the United States of
America for their provisional arrest.
“As the matter is
before the courts, it would not be appropriate to comment further.”
The FBI made the
request to the Australian Federal Police for the arrest of Duggan and will
likely seek to extradite him.
Australia has a
treaty with the US that allows the latter to make a request for extradition
within 60 days of the arrest.
Duggan is a former US citizen who moved to Australia after over 12 years of service in the US military.
He started a
business called Top Gun Tasmania, which provided tourists with fun rides from
ex-military pilots in two different fighter jets — the British Jet Provost
and the Chinese CJ6a Nanchang.
In 2014, Duggan
moved to Beijing and sold Top Gun Tasmania, according to company filings.
Since 2017, he has
worked in Qingdao, China as the managing director of AVIBIZ Limited, which Hong
Kong company records show was registered by Australian passport holder Daniel
Edmund Duggan in 2017.
The company
describes itself as “a comprehensive aviation consultancy company with a focus
on the fast growing and dynamic Chinese aviation industry”. AVIBIZ Limited was
formally closed in 2020.
Last week, World of
Aviation reported that the Australian Defence Force would launch an
investigation into UK newspaper claims that ex-air force pilots are training
the Chinese armed forces in aircraft such as Typhoons, Jaguars, Harriers and
Tornados.
It followed The Times of London reporting that former RAF personnel were
being paid AU$430,000 a year to help China “develop its tactics and
technological expertise”.
The Australian then subsequently
revealed that RAAF veterans were part of the Western cohort of 30 who were
approached through a South African flight school acting as an intermediary
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