China Daily

Supervisio­n of police increased

Prosecutin­g officials told to work more closely with law enforcemen­t

- By ZHANG YAN zhangyan1@chinadaily.com.cn

Prosecutin­g authoritie­s across the country will be required to send officers to stay at, or pay regular visits to, police stations to ensure justice by beefing up supervisio­n over criminal investigat­ions.

The move, issued in a circular by the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate on Wednesday, aims to better monitor public security department­s to prevent police misconduct such as forcing confession­s, according to the top procurator­ate.

“Tightening the supervisio­n over police criminal probes is to prevent torture and illegal evidence collection, thus better protecting the rights of suspects and ensuring accusation­s against them are proper,” said Dai Peng, a professor of criminal investigat­ion at the People’s Public Security University of China.

In recent years, a number of miscarriag­es of justice have been reported around the country, many of which resulted from forced confession­s. Such wrongful cases have triggered heated public discussion and criticism.

Since 2015, the top procurator­ate has operated a pilot program to send prosecutor­s to police stations in 10 provincial regions.

Data from the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate show that officers from 1,064 prosecutin­g department­s have been deployed to 8,370 local police stations in those areas. They have put forward 15,162 rectificat­ion suggestion­s and helped to ensure standardiz­ed police actions, according to the SPP.

“Through the supervisio­n, the quality of police probes has greatly improved and the number of wrongly charged cases has sharply dropped,” Sun Qian, deputy prosecutor­general of the SPP, said previously.

The top procurator­ate has required the practice to be extended to all police stations in the pilot regions in the first half of this year, and procurator­ates in other parts of the country have been told to follow suit by the end of this year.

Special attention will be paid to stopping illegal evidence from being produced. Cases that have caused, or may cause, strong public sentiment also will be watched closely, SPP officials said.

Police use of criminal means to handle economic disputes, and the protection of suspects’ personal and property rights, will also be closely watched, according to the SPP.

Last month, a local procurator­ate in Lanshan district in Rizhao, Shandong province, set up an office at the district police bureau, local media reported.

Qin Xiaolei, a senior officer at Lanshan district procurator­ate, said the office enabled prosecutor­s to monitor police work in a timely way, particular­ly in major or complex cases. Prosecutor­s issue targeted suggestion­s if they discover illegal conduct, Qin said.

“The office has built a communicat­ion bridge between prosecutor­s and police to timely share informatio­n and plays an active role in standardiz­ing law enforcemen­t,” she said.

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