The 34 members of a major criminal gang were beginning lengthy
prison sentences on Sunday night.
Beijing's municipal higher people's court handed down sentences
ranging from three-and-a-half to 20 years to the gangsters at their
trial over the weekend.
They were found guilty of 13 charges, including blackmail,
gambling as well as the possession and selling of firearms.
Police said the gang, operating in Beijing's northeast Shunyi
District since 1996, was the first organized crime outfit to be
dismantled in the city since 1949.
Gang boss Hu Yadong, who was found guilty of 13 charges
including bribery and grievous bodily harm, was jailed for 20 years
as well as being fined 2.62 million yuan (US$331,394). His younger
brother, Hu Yafeng, was jailed for 19 years and received an
identical fine.
The other 32 gangsters, ranging in age from 18 to 54, received
jail terms stretching from three-and-a-half to 18 years.
The court was told that the crime ring went into action in
August 1996, when Hu Yadong hired several men to beat up Zhang
Guoli, who ran a local garage and butchery. The small businessman
had incurred Hu's wrath by reducing the amount of business he put
through Hu's auto-repair service.
The gang's response was bloody in a vicious attack during which
they hacked off half of Zhang's right ear. Hu Yadong later bribed
three policemen and prison guards to get his men out of jail.
He later moved on to collaborating with another gangster, Chang
Yousheng, to swindle money from swill cart drivers in the Gaoliying
area. The trial saw Chang jailed for six years while all three
policemen were dealt with at another hearing.
Also convicted was Zhang Qiusheng, 43, a former lawyer with the
Jingji Law Firm in Beijing. Egged on by Hu Yadong, Zhang stole
80,000 yuan (US$10,119) by promising convicts that he could help
them "buy their way out of prison." He was jailed for five and a
half years.
The hearing was at least the fourth gangster trial in China this
year following a crackdown on gang-related crimes launched in
February by the Ministry of Public Security. This came after its
top official warned that gang crime was on the rise, as society
went through tremendous economic and social changes.
Ministry figures released in July showed that more than 1,000
gang-related crimes were under investigation.
(China Daily October 17, 2006)