On this date in 2009, China executed Li Peiying, the former chairman of a vast airport conglomerate that managed, among many others, Beijing Capital International Airport.
Li was convicted on corruption charges that netted £11 million in bribes and embezzled public funds from 1995 to 2003. Li’s case for leniency was that he gave it all back; the court’s case for aggravation was that Li had solicited (and not merely accepted) the bribes, an “extremely serious crime” resulting in “large economic losses.” For instance, nightclub mogul Qin Hui* was able to secure through Li $90 million in loans and guarantees
The state-owned Capital Airports Holding Co. that Li managed was reported at the time of his execution to employ 38,000 people and handle 30% of China’s air traffic.
In 2011, the successor to the corporate titancy Li was deposed from, Zhang Zhizhong, was himself convicted of wholesale corruption.** Perhaps in deference to China’s ongoing gradual de-escalation of penalties imposed for white-collar economic crimes, Zhang received only a 12-year prison sentence.
* Qin Hui shares a name with a villain in the classical story of Yue Fei. Our Qin Hui just owned the Paradise club in the Great Wall Sheraton.
** China’s aviation industry as a whole is notorious for corruption.
On this day..
- 2001: Vishal and Sonu, honor killings
- 1661: Jin Shengtan, literary scholar
- 1849: Celigny Ardouin, Haitian Minister of the Interior
- 1849: Ernst Elsenhans, Rastatt revolutionary
- 1844: William Saville, brutalising scene
- 1933: The Simele Massacre of Iraq's Assyrians begins
- 1864: Li Xiucheng, Taiping Rebellion general
- 1896: Charles Thiede, the first since Utah statehood
- 1930: Thomas Shipp and Abram Smith, strange fruit
- 1936: The Sacred Heart, by Spanish leftists
- 1859: Ormond Chase, casus belli not quite
- 1777: A British spy, by Israel Putnam