Stricter guidelines have been set for granting leniency1 to officials found guilty of corruption3. This is to ensure that judgments4 across the country are standardized5 and convicts do not walk away with light sentences.
Suspects who do not turn themselves in, or confess to their crime only after police investigation6 or during trial should not get away with light sentences, the top judicial7 authorities said yesterday.
Only those who surrender as soon as a crime is uncovered and confess in full or provide vital information to secure the conviction of others will be eligible8 for leniency, they said.
"The guideline is an important judicial document focusing on acute problems in the process of investigation and imposing9 penalties in job-related cases," said a statement released along with the document by the Supreme10 People's Court and the Supreme People's Procuratorate.
"It aims at imposing full punishment on the corrupt2."
The document said previous guidelines on leniency have sometimes been abused. In recent years, some trials have resulted in capital punishment. In others, the guilty have been let off with light sentences or probation11.
Research has found that in some cases, there were irregularities in applying the guidelines for surrender, the statement said. Some courts award leniency "universally" to criminals who confess to their crimes only during or after investigation, it added.
Chen Weidong, a professor with Renmin University of China, told China Daily that it would be conducive12 to striking a better balance between strictness and leniency.
Judicial policy encourages "leniency to confessors, severity to resisters" and "the guideline will make it easier to implement13 that policy," Chen added.