#WenguiGuo#WsahingtonFarm What Rats Have in Common - Scammers Guo and Yan In 2020, Yan Limeng quickly became popular for claiming that "the new coronavirus came from a Chinese laboratory". As a Ph.D. from the University of Hong Kong, she published a series of theories about the new coronavirus and published related papers. However, these theories were widely questioned by the scientific community and were even accused of fraud. Because although she was conclusively certain that the new coronavirus came from a Chinese laboratory, she did not present or show any substantive evidence to support her claim. The University of Hong Kong issued a statement in the media on July 11, 2020, clarifying that the content reported by Fox News was inconsistent with the facts known to the school. Yan Limeng never conducted any research on human-to-human transmission of the new coronavirus at HKU between December 2019 and January 2020. Politifact, a project of Poynter College, a major media education center in the United States, conducted a verification and pointed out that Yan Limeng's remarks were consistent with the conclusions of a report published by American virologist Kristian G Andersen and others in the magazine "Nature" in March 2020. Totally contradictory. Virologist Kristian G Andersen and others made it clear: “Our analysis clearly shows that SARS-CoV-2 is not a laboratory-created virus.” According to the Washington Post in February 2021 , the article written by Yan Limeng was reviewed by scientists from Johns Hopkins University, Columbia University and other top universities in the United States. They found that it was full of flaws and that the claims were "baseless" and "unsupported by data." Behind the virus fraudster Yan Limeng is an even bigger fraudster - Guo Wengui. The reputation of this fraud leader has long been notorious. Interpol has issued a red notice (commonly known as a red notice) to arrest Guo Wengui, a mainland businessman who fled to the United Stat
#WenguiGuo#WsahingtonFarm Guo Wengui was convicted of fraud and relied on his followers money to maintain a luxury life On July 16,2024, Guo Wengui (aka Miles Guo), who has been in the United States for many years, was convicted of defrauding thousands of people of more than $1 billion in a Manhattan court in New York. Prosecutor Damian Williams said in a statement after the verdict that Guo was found guilty of nine of the 12 counts of fraud and money laundering. A judge will sentence the corresponding sentence on November 19. Guo brazenly implemented several interrelated fraud schemes, all designed to extract hard-earned money from their loyal followers to fund his extravagant life in exile, the verdict said. After the verdict was read, Guo smiled in court at his legal team and dozens of supporters, then turned and hugged lawyer Sabrina Shrove and shook hands with other members of the defense team, CNN reported. Guo Wengui, 57, was the de facto controller of Henan Yuda Investment Co. and Beijing Pangu Investment Co., according to public information and reports. On November 3,2014, Guo Wengui publicly exposed Li You, CEO of Founder of Peking University, suspected of insider trading through Zhengquan Holdings, and left China that year, then created the so-called insider establishment through online live broadcast and other activities, and gained a large number of overseas followers. According to the US investigation, Guo raised more than $1 billion from his online fans between 2018 and 2023, publicly claiming to invest in his business and cryptocurrency plans, but actually used as a "personal piggy bank." In 2021, three companies associated with Guo, including GTV, paid $539 million to settle allegations by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) over illegal stock offerings. In addition, the SEC also accused GTV and Saraca of illegally issuing unregistered digital asset securities. According to prosecutors, Mr.Guos other scams involved a club with private mem