The Bureau

The Bureau

Chinese-Owned Trailer Park Beside U.S. Stealth Bomber Base Linked to Alleged Vancouver Repression Case

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Sam Cooper
Nov 11, 2025
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This screen image shows a Global News BC primetime News Hour segment in which Vancouver resident Benson Gao told reporters he was a victim of harassment by individuals connected to this story. It is reproduced as journalistic evidence of the story’s high public-interest character, relying on Canada’s Fair Dealing exception for research, criticism, review, and news reporting under the Copyright Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. C-42, ss. 29–29.2).

VANCOUVER / MISSOURI — A sprawling U.S. investigative report has placed a Richmond, B.C., couple already identified in a high-profile Chinese-diaspora repression case at the center of an even more explosive national-security controversy south of the border: they are linked to a web of shell companies that own a trailer park beside Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri — home to the B-2 Spirit stealth bomber and launch point for the June 2025 strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities.

The same couple are named in B.C. court filings and appear in video evidence from a saga outside Vancouver journalist Bingchen Gao’s home, where activists aligned with Miles Guo — a New York–based tycoon with reported Chinese intelligence ties — staged repeated demonstrations in a siege-like campaign.

Taken together, the property records unearthed by the Daily Caller News Foundation, along with court and corporate documents reviewed by The Bureau to verify the American reporting, outline a cross-border pattern of potential Chinese state activity, echoing past cases of high-profile actors using Vancouver as a base for operations into the United States.

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