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Photographer: Balint Porneczi/Bloomberg Photographer: Balint Porneczi/Bloomberg

U.S. prosecutors charged a New York company and its employees with a 13-year scheme to illegally import and sell Chinese-made surveillance and security equipment to the American government.

Aventura Technologies Inc., founder Jack Cabasso and six others are accused of defrauding customers including military agencies by falsely claiming that it manufactured security cameras and other products in the U.S. when they were actually imported from China.

Aventura “created a channel by which foreign adversaries and other actors” could access “some of our government’s most sensitive facilities and computer networks,” U.S. Attorney Richard Donoghue said at a news conference in Brooklyn, New York. The products Aventura claimed to manufacture had “known cybersecurity vulnerabilities,” he said.

Six of those charged were arrested Thursday and are scheduled to appear in federal court in Brooklyn. They’re accused of money laundering and conspiracy to commit wire and mail fraud.

The U.S. seized records, bank accounts and a 70-foot yacht purchased with money made in the scheme, prosecutors said.

Messages left for the Commack, New York-based company and for James Branden, Cabasso’s lawyer, weren’t immediately returned.

Aventura sold laser-enhanced night vision cameras to the Navy and body cameras to the Air Force, prosecutors said. Aventura, which also claimed to manufacture walk-through metal detectors, collected at least $88 million in the scheme, prosecutors said.

( Updates with details of government’s allegations. )