Is Vincent Yang a CCP agent hired by Canadian government to pervert justice?



Why you should care: Vincent Yang is an experienced legal scholar who has repeatedly acted inside both Canadian-funded reform projects and Communist China’s political institutions has been an influential voice in high-profile Canada–China cases. That role — especially when it includes serving as an expert for Canadian authorities in deportation/extradition disputes — deserves scrutiny from the Canadian public. Below is a compact, sourced profile so Canadians can see clearly who he is, what he did, and why it matters.

What he did in Canada-PRC dealings

  1. Program leadership for Canadian ODA-style work: ICCLR’s Canada–China program that he led was explicitly designed to assist criminal justice reforms and to build sustained working relationships between Canadian experts and PRC judicial institutions under Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission of the Chinese Communist Party(中共中央政法委). That is institutional, funded engagement — not informal networking.

  2. Expert witness role in deportation/extradition litigation: He served as an expert witness in the Lai case and publicly presented an interpretation that China’s judicial system had made reforms and could be judged against international standards — a position with direct legal effect on whether a Canadian court would allow deportation. That’s not a neutral blog post; it is court-level expert input with consequences for Canadian legal decisions.

  3. Simultaneous academic and political linkage: While holding academic posts in Macau and continuing to guest/hold positions at PRC institutions, he also appears in PRC political consultative structures — a combination that places him inside both academic and political networks on the Chinese side.


Is Vincent Yang a CCP agent hired by Canadian government to pervert justice? by CPA Jim

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Who is Robin Guo — the co-founder of Wyvern Investigation Agency?


If you are a dissident, activist, or otherwise critical of the CCP, you should be aware that Robin Guo, co-founder of Wyvern Investigation Agency in Toronto, has deep professional ties to the PRC legal and policing system. His firm advertises cross-border investigation services, including executing PRC court judgments and arbitration awards in Canada. Engagement with this firm could expose sensitive personal or organizational information to entities connected to the CCP. Canadians dealing with PRC-related legal or business matters should exercise extreme caution and rely only on independent Canadian legal counsel.

Meet Robin Guo, the co-founder and public face behind Wyvern Investigation Agency, a Toronto-based private investigation firm that pitches itself as a bridge between Canadian legal needs and cross-border matters involving the Communist China (PRC), a state controlled by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). 

Wyvern Investigation Agency claims to have “close working relationships with PRC law firms” and offers assistance in enforcing PRC court judgments and arbitration awards in Canada. For Canadians, this is not just a business collaboration — it is a potentially high-risk channel through which information and legal actions could be directed by entities connected to the PRC state.



Who is Robin Guo — the co-founder of Wyvern Investigation Agency? by CPA Jim

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Military–Civilian Overlap in China’s Drug Research: Shanghai Materia Medica Case Study






Since the 1950s, the Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica (SIMM), under the Chinese Academy of Sciences, has participated in multiple national defense–related scientific programs organized jointly by the PLA General Logistics Department, the State Science Commission, the Ministry of Health, the Ministry of Chemical Industry, and the Commission for Science, Technology and Industry for National Defense. In other words, collaboration with military-linked medical institutions is not a recent deviation—it is historically embedded in SIMM’s institutional mission profile.

A 2021 paper published in the Academic Journal of Second Military Medical University illustrates this continuity. 



Military–Civilian Overlap in China’s Drug Research: Shanghai Materia Medica Case Study by CPA Jim

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Breaking!!! Alibaba’s Security Arm Self Reveals Deep Integration with CCP’s Political-Legal System

The evidence provides rare official confirmation that Alibaba functions as part of the CCP’s broader apparatus of social control, blurring the line between commercial cybersecurity and the Party-state’s political-legal enforcement system.





Breaking!!! Alibaba’s Security Arm Self Reveals Deep Integration with CCP’s Political-Legal System by CPA Jim

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Robotics, Biopharma, and the Military-Academic Nexus: What’s Behind Jinbo’s “Smart Medical” Push?




Shanxi Jinbo Bio-Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. is a Shanxi-based biotechnology company focused on functional protein materials, including recombinant humanized type III collagen and anti-HPV protein applications. The company maintains joint research platforms with major Chinese universities and has expanded into AI-enabled biomedical and medical aesthetics applications.

Zhang Xingdong serves as Chief Scientific Advisor on biomaterials for Jinbo. He is a prominent biomaterials expert associated with national-level biomedical engineering platforms and has participated in industry forums alongside PLA medical representatives and Jinbo leadership.

The People's Liberation Army Joint Logistic Support Force (JLSF) was established in 2016 under reforms directed by Xi Jinping as Chairman of the Central Military Commission. It oversees unified logistics support across the PLA, including transportation, supply, and medical systems. Military medical institutions, including major PLA hospital centers, operate within this integrated support structure.

Jiang Shibo, Director of the Institute of Medical Microbiology at Fudan University, serves as Chief Scientist for Jinbo. Public records show that he has co-applied for patents and co-authored research with institutes under the Academy of Military Medical Sciences and with the PLA Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

The Academy of Military Medical Sciences (AMMS) is a PLA-affiliated biomedical research body historically responsible for military medical research, including microbiology, epidemiology, and bioengineering. Institutes under AMMS have appeared in joint patent filings and academic publications involving Jiang Shibo and associated research entities.

For a detailed analysis of how these institutional links intersect across corporate, academic, and PLA structures, please read the full article here:

Robotics, Biopharma, and the Military-Academic Nexus: What’s Behind Jinbo’s “Smart Medical” Push? by CPA Jim

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A Little-Known 2019 Event: The 8th Wuhan International Symposium on Modern Virology








In retrospect, the September 2019 symposium was not merely an academic gathering.

The conference included not only university scientists and civilian research institutes, but also researchers affiliated with China’s military research system, including senior personnel from the People’s Liberation Army’s Academy of Military Medical Sciences.

The presence of high-level virologists working on emerging pathogens, viral mutation mechanisms, cross-species transmission, and translational applications — combined with participation from military-linked research institutions — adds an additional layer of geopolitical and biosecurity relevance.

While the event was publicly framed as an international scientific exchange, the institutional composition of its speakers reflects the intersection of civilian, state, and military research structures within China’s virology ecosystem.

Given the timing — only weeks before the first known COVID-19 cases — the symposium represents a significant data point in understanding the broader research landscape in Wuhan immediately prior to the pandemic.

A Little-Known 2019 Event: The 8th Wuhan International Symposium on Modern Virology by CPA Jim

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Horace Loh: A Taiwanese Scientist in the Chinese Communist Party’s Strategic Orbit



Horace Loh (罗浩), a Taiwanese citizen and member of Taiwan’s Academia Sinica, is widely known for his distinguished career in pharmacology, having served as Chair of the Department of Pharmacology at the University of Minnesota for 24 years and later as a Regents Professor—the highest lifetime honor at the university. What is less commonly discussed, however, is his extensive engagement with institutions and personnel linked to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) between 1980 and 2019.
The 2nd International Scientific Advisory Committee of the Guangzhou Institute of Biomedicine and Health, Chinese Academy of Sciences, held its inaugural meeting on December 17, 2009. Attendees included Leroy Hood, Director of the Institute for Systems Biology (USA); Rudolf Jaenisch, Professor of Biology at MIT (USA); Horace Loh, Professor of Pharmacology, University of Minnesota (USA); and Pei Duanqing, President of the Institute. Additional participants included Pei’s assistant Wu Donghai, Chief Technology Officer Mickey Tortorella, Deputy Director Lai Liangxue of the South China Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine Institute, Deputy Director Ding Ke of the Institute of Chemical Biology, and Director Chen Xiaoping of the Center for Infection and Immunity.
Chi Zhiqiang (池志强): CCP party member, long-time leader at Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica, involved in nuclear and defense-related biomedical research. In 1999, Chi visited the United States, gave lectures, and met with Loh at the University of Minnesota, where Loh was department chair.

Chi Zhiqiang is a distinguished Chinese pharmacologist and senior scientist with a long career at the Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica, Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS). He previously served as Deputy Director of the Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica and Deputy Director of the Shanghai Branch of CAS, and held roles in international scientific bodies, including as an executive committee member of the International Narcotics Research Conference. He also served in civic leadership positions, including Standing Committee Member of the Shanghai Municipal People’s Political Consultative Conference and Director of the Shanghai Science and Technology Commission.

Chi joined the Chinese Communist Party in January 1949 and participated in underground intelligence work during the final months of the Republic of China, providing strategic reports that assisted the CCP in taking control of Hangzhou. He graduated top of his class from the inaugural cohort of Zhejiang University’s pharmacy program in 1949. In 1953, he formally joined the Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica, CAS, marking the start of his lifelong research career.

From the late 1950s, Chi led specialized national defense research programs on protection against acute radiation injury, establishing and heading the Fifth Research Group (later Fifth Laboratory). His team developed highly effective radioprotective drugs such as “1759” and later completed the 6003 Project, which received national scientific recognition.

Beyond defense-related work, Chi’s group pioneered strong analgesics and neuroreceptor research. Over seven years, they developed Oxyfentanyl, an opioid with 6,300 times the analgesic potency of morphine and 26 times that of fentanyl, notable for its low toxicity, low addiction potential, and stability. This breakthrough gained global attention and was later applied in counterterrorism and military research.

Chi also initiated domestic research on opioid receptors and high-selectivity ligands, strategically moving applied discoveries into theoretical and foundational studies, establishing a bridge between innovation and fundamental pharmacology. He was recognized with multiple awards, including the Second-Class National Defense Science and Technology Achievement Award and the Dedication to National Defense Science and Technology Honor Medal.

In consequence, Chi Zhiqiang’s research is associated with two categories that the United States classifies as weapons of mass destruction: nuclear and narcotic agents.

Nuclear-related military research – Through the Fifth Research Group at the Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica, he led the development of radioprotective drugs (“1759” and the 6003 Project) that were part of Communist China’s nuclear defense programs. These are tied to nuclear warfare preparedness, which the U.S. treats as WMD-related.

Powerful synthetic opioids – His team developed Oxyfentanyl, an extremely potent opioid used in high-intensity analgesia and military research, including counterterrorism applications. The U.S. classifies certain high-potency chemical opioids as chemical weapons under WMD policy when militarized or used as incapacitating agents.

The logic is straightforward:

Nuclear weapons research isn’t just about building bombs; it also involves testing and handling highly radioactive materials. Anyone participating in those experiments or tests is exposed to radiation.

Without effective radioprotective drugs or emergency treatments, scientists and technicians face extremely high personal risk, including acute radiation sickness or death.

Developing drugs that mitigate radiation damage is therefore a necessary enabler for a nuclear program — it protects personnel so experiments and tests can be conducted safely enough to allow progress.

In this sense, research on radiation-protective drugs, like the work led by Zhiqiang Chi’s team, is directly linked to the feasibility of Communist China’s nuclear weapons program, even if it doesn’t involve designing the bombs themselves.

So while many outsiders see “pharmaceutical research” and “nuclear weapons” as unrelated, in reality, one supports the other. Without such protective measures, the CCP’s scientists might not have dared to conduct the experiments needed to build nuclear arms.

Horace Loh: A Taiwanese Scientist in the Chinese Communist Party’s Strategic Orbit by CPA Jim

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