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Prosecutors Rest Their Case Against Ex-Hochul Aide After Calling Several Dozen Witnesses
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Linda Sun arrives at the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York in New York City on Nov. 24, 2025. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)
By Nicholas Zifcak and Eva Fu
12/6/2025Updated: 12/6/2025

NEW YORK—Prosecutors have wrapped up their case against Linda Sun, former senior aide to New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, in the high-profile foreign agent trial after calling several dozen witnesses to the stand.

Sun, 42, had worked for more than 15 years in the New York government, serving under both former Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Hochul.

During the more than three-week trial, prosecutors presented files alleging Sun’s close ties with the Chinese consulate in New York and kickbacks for her husband’s business, including text messages in which Sun bragged about her influence over state officials and expressed desire to do more for her native country.

The defense will present its side on Dec. 8 and Dec. 9. Sun and her husband Chris Hu have yet to decide if they will take the stand to testify.

‘Much More Obedient’


In early 2021, Sun convinced Hochul, then lieutenant governor, to film a Chinese Lunar New Year greeting for the Chinese consulate.

“She is much more obedient than the governor,” Sun wrote to Chinese consular official Li Lihua, according to text messages prosecutors presented.

Sun had asked Li for talking points and promised to “make sure to include it in her remarks,” according to screenshots of the messages.

Li, after receiving a link to the recorded greeting video from Sun in January 2021, wrote: “Wow, that’s perfect.”

The video, released by the Chinese consulate in February 2021, showed Hochul saying Happy Chinese New Year in Chinese. Hochul in the video also gave recognition to the then New York Chinese consul general, Huang Ping, by name, saying it was a “privilege” to work with him and that she had cherished the chance to participate in Lunar New Year parades throughout the state every year.

Text messages also showed Sun to have close communications with Huang.

In April 2020, she thanked Huang for praising her in front of the governor. “[T]his way it will give me more power and also I can help my native country to do more things,” she wrote.

“Must praise you, you are outstanding,” Huang replied. Sun then said that she hoped to be “as good as you in the future.”

The Epoch Times has reached out to Hochul’s office for comment.

Payments From China


At the start of the pandemic in 2019, Sun was in charge of locating vendors of needed medical gear such as ventilators, masks, gloves, and hand sanitizer. Prosecutors alleged that Sun took advantage of the role and took large sums of kickbacks from China.

New York state entered into contracts totaling $12 million with a company called High Hope, based in Jiangsu, China, which is associated with Sun’s husband Chris Hu.

In a spreadsheet, Hu had a formula to calculate the profit as the total payout from New York state for the surgical masks and gloves, which also accounts for costs and shipping fees, according to documents presented at court. The profit he calculated came out to more than $6 million, the spreadsheet shows. The profit, according to the spreadsheet, was equally divided between him and his partner Henry Hua, a Chinese businessman based in Vancouver and Nanjing with a close business relationship with High Hope.

Through a handful of different channels, Hua and his company Constar allegedly laundered money back to Hu through third parties, according to prosecutors. Hu kept account of all these payments on his Excel sheet and deducted them from a cell titled “Henry owes me,” prosecutors said.

United Front ‘Address Book’


Sun was featured on a who’s who booklet by the All-China Federation of Returned Overseas Chinese organization, a group that operates under the overseas influence arm of the communist regime known as the United Front, according to prosecutors.

At the trial, prosecutors presented several event badges from conferences Sun attended in China as well as a small blue “Address Book.” The small 4 by 6 inch booklet contains attendees’ head shots along with their position or title abroad, street address, and personal email address.

Sun was a speaker at a conference the organization hosted in 2018, with a Chinese agent facilitating her travel and reserving a presidential suite previously used by First Lady Michelle Obama during her stay in Beijing, according to the indictment. Around the same time, prosecutors said, the same individual was assisting Hu’s business affairs in China.

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Eva Fu
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Eva Fu is an award-winning, New York-based journalist for The Epoch Times focusing on U.S. politics, U.S.-China relations, religious freedom, and human rights. Contact Eva at eva.fu@epochtimes.com

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