Bin played an important role in the conspiracy, directing his hacker colleagues on who to attack (be it a person, technology or company) and which individual folders to steal from a firm like Boeing's computer systems. The files within included data on the C-17 transport aircraft (above) and "certain fighter planes." He worked as a translator as well, putting the stolen information in the native language of potential Chinese buyers.

The feds cite this as an example that if you're performing cyber attacks on the US, the government won't hold back in their pursuit -- no matter where you live. In this case that means Canada, but it's an image the agencies certainly want to project as these attacks become more common, and it's issuing warrants in places like Syria. The only problem with that, however, is that Su Bin's two co-conspirators in China remain unindicted.