How does a business consultant end up in the middle of a spy scandal?
That’s the question swirling around Alexander Csergo after a court in Sydney found him guilty of reckless foreign interference.
The 59-year-old now faces up to 15 years in prison, becoming only the second person convicted under Australia’s anti-spying laws introduced in 2018.
Prosecutors said Csergo was approached in 2021 while running a business in Shanghai.
A woman claiming to represent a think tank connected him with two mysterious contacts known only as “Ken” and “Evelyn.”
Their request? Detailed reports on sensitive topics—from lithium mining and iron ore.
To security alliances like AUKUS and the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue.
The meetings sounded almost cinematic: quiet cafés, empty restaurants, envelopes stuffed with cash.
Espionage Allegations Examined
In exchange, Csergo handed over reports. Prosecutors argued he should have suspected the pair were linked to Ministry of State Security.
His defence pushed back.The reports, they said, were based on public information.
With some embellishments, including fake interviews with figures like former prime minister Kevin Rudd.

Investigators later uncovered a “shopping list” of topics during a search of his home.
So was this espionage—or just sloppy consulting? The court decided the risk was real enough.
And in today’s world of geopolitical tension, even information that’s technically public can carry very private consequences.


