@pepe Just to try, I connected the drive to a USB3 port on the back of the PC with a short cable. What happens is strange. It turns on and spins like before but this time, after a few seconds it stops spinning and the power led light goes into a slow blinking mode (on-off-on-off, every few seconds.) When I connect to the front of the PC (USB2 port) or a USB3 hub that's connected to the PC, it continually spins and the power led light stays on constantly.
@northwind I don't think HDDSuperClone can solve the Slow responding problem because I don't have a "slow" responding issue but a "no" responding issue. The drive is not detected in a way that anything can scan it.
@BGman I'm also not in the DR business but I am a software engineer programmer, so I've been able to do many DR and video/audio repair jobs on the side that don't need clean rooms or PCB swaps. Even a simple stuck head is ok for me

When you say "The job is very simple, but is not DIY. Every pro can do it" I'd like to ask what you mean by "is not DIY." Is it because of decrypting? If I can get the drive to be detected, I can figure out the decrypting part in Linux or something. I'm doing this more for the experience. If all it needs to get detected is soldering a few wires to convert it to SATA, I have a professional soldering guy that would do that for $30. But if converting to SATA absolutely REQUIRES a PCB swap and controller swap (which risks damaging the ROM chip and losing data, then maybe I'd skip this job.
So my question is, is there a way to just get the drive detected in Windows or Linux without swapping the PCB or chips. Would bypassing the USB port to SATA be enough to get it detected and scannable?