China says ex-cop cooperated in murder probe
Topics: From the Wires, News
People walk past the Chengdu Intermediate People's Court, where Wang Lijun will be tried on Tuesday, in Chengdu in southwest China's Sichuan province Monday, Sept. 17, 2012. At the height of his career, Wang Lijun led a police crackdown on the violent underworld in a sprawling metropolis, arresting hundreds of gangsters and government officials, some of whom were sentenced and executed in a matter of months. Now the former police chief is in the hands of the opaque Chinese justice he once brandished against others. (AP Photo/Andy Wong) (Credit: Andy Wong)CHENGDU, China (AP) — Prosecutors argued that an ex-police chief cooperated with investigators after initially covering up the murder of a British businessman by a top Chinese politician’s wife, a court official said Tuesday at the end of a trial that is enmeshed with a political scandal roiling China’s leadership.
The Intermediate Court in Chengdu city concluded Wang Lijun’s trial after two half-day sessions without a verdict. But the proceedings bring Chinese leaders a step closer to resolving the scandal that exposed seamy infighting and buffeted a delicate transfer of power to new leaders.
A summary of the trial by a court spokesman fleshed out Wang’s role in the murder last year, saying that Gu Kailai, the wife of Chongqing Communist Party chief Bo Xilai, conferred with him before and after the crime. Gu confessed to the murder and received a suspended death sentence at a trial last month.
The summary also said that prosecutors and Wang’s lawyers argued that he cooperated with authorities after his arrest.
The emphasis in the official accounts on Wang’s cooperation suggests authorities may give him a lighter sentence. The crimes he faces are generally punishable by up to 10 years in prison with a 20-year maximum for consecutive sentences, though sentencing guidelines allow for life imprisonment in egregious cases.
The scandal erupted after Wang fled to the U.S. Consulate in Chengdu in February with information that Gu’s business partner Neil Heywood — whose death in November was initially ruled as either a homicide or a heart attack — was in fact murdered and that Gu was a suspect. After a 33-hour stay at the consulate, Wang gave himself up to Chinese authorities.
The trial summary said Wang knew that Gu was a suspect in the murder all along and only cooperated with authorities after the alleged cover-up and his attempted defection at the U.S. consulate failed.
Absent in the official version was any mention of Bo, Wang’s longtime boss and Gu’s husband. Bo was removed as Chongqing’s chief and suspended from the Politburo and his fate remains the thorniest issue his colleagues must still resolve.
The scandal would have gone unnoticed but for the involvement of a foreigner. Following British demands for a full investigation, Chinese leaders were forced to make public scandalous details that it would have preferred to keep private, further dirtying the Communist Party’s already soiled image to the public.




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