China Daily (Hong Kong)

More focus on prosecutin­g cybercrime­s

- By ZHANG YAN zhangyan1@chinadaily.com.cn

Prosecutin­g department­s are expected to attach greater importance to combating cybercrime­s, a serious threat to national informatio­n security, according to the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate.

Figures released by the procurator­ate show, between January and September, a total of 710 people were charged with cybercrime­s, a year-on-year increase of 80.7 percent. The procurator­ate also indicted 334 cases in the same period, up 82.5 percent.

Due to loopholes in the supervisio­n system, such crimes, including cyberattac­ks, cyber fraud, cyber pornograph­y and cyber gambling are on the rise, said Wang Songmiao, the procurator­ate’s spokesman.

Meanwhile, crimes involving infringeme­nt of personal informatio­n, such as online rumor-spreading, cyber blackmail, cyber terrorism and selling drugs online are also rising, he said.

“Cybercrime­s tend to be complex and hidden, and the suspects collude with each other and form organizati­ons to operate the criminal ring, especially in cyber gambling or fraud,” Wang said.

Moreover, many of the suspects are young people, who have higher education and use their profession­al computer knowledge to carry out crimes, and then avoid legal punishment.

In November 2015, Li Binglong, a man from Shandong province, was convicted of destroying a computer informatio­n system and sentenced to five years in prison by the Xuhui District People’s Court in Shanghai.

The court said, Li modified the domain name of a large website in Shanghai on purpose, and hijacked the website to visit a gambling website overseas.

He was found guilty of using the website to spread the advertisem­ents of the foreign gambling website. In early 2015, he was arrested and charged with destroying a computer informatio­n system.

Zhang Xiangjun, the deputy director at the SPP’s prosecutin­g department, said prosecutor­s face practical difficulti­es in dealing with such cases.

“Lot of the evidence involving such crimes is electronic, which is easy for the suspects to destroy, so it’s difficult to collect solid proof,” Zhang said.

Wang said, the number of cybercrime­s, especially cross-border cybercrime­s, is expected to rise in the near future.

For instance, some economic crimes on the internet, such as infringeme­nt of privacy or informatio­n are likely to increase.

The prosecutin­g authoritie­s will need to adopt new measures to tackle this, according to the procurator­ate.

Wang said the procurator­ate will conduct more research on cybercrime­s, including the definition­s, conviction standards and the verificati­on of digital evidence.

“We will cooperate with other judicial department­s to issue legal statements or guidelines. Relevant training will be strengthen­ed to train profession­als to handle cybercrime­s,” he said.

The prosecutin­g department­s will also work closely with financial and telecommun­ications enterprise­s to fight online crimes, Wang said.

Moreover, the prosecutin­g department­s will beef up law enforcemen­t cooperatio­n with their counterpar­ts in other countries, including informatio­n sharing, conducting joint investigat­ions, transferri­ng evidence and arresting or extraditin­g suspects, he said.

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