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Shocking Arcadia mayor China case: Eileen Wang’s guilty plea exposes explosive foreign agent scandal

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Arcadia mayor China case
ARCARDIA, Calif. — Arcadia Mayor Eileen Wang has agreed to plead guilty to acting as an unregistered agent for the People’s Republic of China, a federal case that has triggered a sweeping political fallout in Southern California and raised new questions about foreign influence in local U.S. government, May 12, 2026.

Federal prosecutors say Wang secretly coordinated with Chinese government-linked individuals to distribute pro-Beijing propaganda through a website while failing to disclose her activities under U.S. law, according to court filings and the Department of Justice.

Arcadia mayor China case: guilty plea and resignation shake local government

Wang, who served on the Arcadia City Council before becoming mayor, resigned immediately after the case became public. She has now agreed to plead guilty to a felony charge that carries a maximum sentence of up to 10 years in federal prison, according to prosecutors.

Authorities allege that between 2020 and 2022, Wang worked with individuals tied to Chinese government interests to operate a media platform called “U.S. News Center,” which targeted Chinese-American audiences with curated political messaging.

According to federal filings, Wang did not disclose that some of the content was directed by foreign officials, a key violation of U.S. foreign agent registration laws.

How the alleged foreign influence operation worked

Investigators say Wang and co-conspirators coordinated messaging through encrypted communications, including directing the publication of articles that echoed Chinese government positions on sensitive topics such as human rights in Xinjiang.

Prosecutors also allege Wang reported audience metrics back to contacts linked to Chinese authorities, reinforcing concerns that the platform was used as a soft-power influence tool rather than a legitimate independent news outlet.

The case is part of a broader federal counterintelligence effort targeting covert foreign influence campaigns in the United States, according to officials familiar with the investigation.

Previous reporting and long-running scrutiny of influence operations

The Arcadia mayor China case follows years of growing federal scrutiny over foreign influence operations targeting local officials and diaspora communities in the U.S. Earlier reporting by national outlets has highlighted similar concerns involving Chinese-language media platforms used to shape political narratives in Southern California’s Asian-American communities, including Arcadia’s.

Investigators have also been expanding probes into networks tied to political messaging operations allegedly coordinated with foreign officials, a trend documented in prior cases involving influence campaigns across California municipalities.

Wang’s attorneys have acknowledged wrongdoing but argue that her actions occurred before she formally took office, while prosecutors maintain the conduct still violated federal law and undermined public trust.

She is expected to formally enter her guilty plea in the coming weeks in federal court in Los Angeles.

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