2001: Zhang Jun and his gang
May 20th, 2009 Headsman
On this date in 2001, an infamous crime lord and 13 members of his gang were put to death in two Hunan Province cities.
Suave serial bank robber Zhang Jun had a reported 28 deaths on his conscience, including such underworld classics as forcing a lover to execute someone in order to prove her loyalty, in a years-long spree of robbery and mayhem. He was a major catch early in China’s execution-rich “strike hard” crime crackdown.
Despite-slash-because of the body trail, the cool Zhang — who appeared in court dressed modishly and flaunting such indifference to death that he disdained to defend himself — attracted a strain of fandom for his “gangland chic”.
He’s kind of like the gangsters in the movies, really likable.
The authorities, and his many victims, liked him less.

A still shot from the broadcast of Zhang Jun’s trial.
According to Courts and Criminal Justice in Contemporary China, the gang’s trial had the distinction of being the first ever broadcast live in China.
Zhang Jun’s trial was notable for its ripples in other media as well. The Committee to Protect Journalists reported that several writers and editors were demoted or fired after publishing a story in Nanfang Zhoumo (Southern Weekend) exploring the gang’s roots in poverty and inequality … a take deemed inimical to the dialectical historical march of the Peoples’ Republic. (See here for some of the more approved commentary angles.)
Also On This Date
Possibly Related Executions
- 2004: Nam Cam, Vietnamese crime lord
- 2005: Wang Binyu, desperate migrant laborer
- 2003: Liu Yong, for corruption
Entry Filed under: 21st Century, Capital Punishment, China, Common Criminals, Crime, Death Penalty, Execution, Infamous, Mass Executions, Milestones, Murder, Organized Crime, Shot, Theft
Tags: 2000s, 2001, changde, chongqing, journalism, may 20, television, zhang jun
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1 Comment Add your own
1. ExecutedToday.com »&hellip | May 30th, 2009 at 1:08 am
[...] * This would have been around the same time that a similar fate befell journalists indiscreet enough to explore the unflattering-to-the-People’s-Republic social environment of an executed gangster. [...]
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