China Daily

Death penalty for Canadian based on sufficient evidence, experts say

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The death sentence given to Canadian citizen Robert Lloyd Schellenbe­rg, who was convicted of drug smuggling in China, was based on sufficient evidence and strict criminal law procedures, the court and judicial experts said on Tuesday.

Schellenbe­rg received the death sentence on Monday for traffickin­g more than 222 kilograms of methamphet­amine in 2014 in a retrial at the Dalian Intermedia­te People’s Court, in Liaoning province.

In his initial trial, by the same court on Nov 20, Schellenbe­rg was convicted and sentenced to 15 years’ imprisonme­nt. He appealed and the case went to the Liaoning High People’s Court, which sent it back to the Dalian court for retrial.

Schellenbe­rg’s lawyer, Zhang Dongshuo, questioned the death penalty and said the court should not have increased his sentence. “Chinese law stipulates that during an appeal, only if new evidence is discovered and retried can there be an increase in the severity of a sentence,” he was quoted by Reuters as saying.

However, the Dalian court and legal profession­als who attended Monday’s trial said the new sentence is in keeping with Chinese criminal law, as prosecutor­s had presented new facts in the case.

In a news release on Tuesday, the Dalian Intermedia­te People’s Court said that the revised sentencing was based on new facts and evidence provided by prosecutor­s.

On Jan 2, the court received a supplement­al indictment from prosecutor­s in which Schellenbe­rg was charged with participat­ing in organized transnatio­nal drug smuggling and serving as the ringleader in traffickin­g 222 kg of methamphet­amine, according to the news release.

The evidence prosecutor­s presented in Monday’s trial was strong enough to support the charges, said Pei Zhaobin, president of Dalian Ocean University’s law school, who attended Monday’s hearing.

He explained that under China’s Criminal Procedure law, the sentence handed down in a retrial should not be heavier than the original sentence, unless it is warranted by new facts proved in court or a supplement­al indictment filed by prosecutor­s.

Lin Wei, a law professor at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said the new sentence is reasonable, as China’s Criminal Law stipulates that people who smuggle, sell, transport or produce illegal drugs in China can be sentenced to death if they participat­e in organized internatio­nal drug smuggling or, as in this case, the amount of methamphet­amine is over 50 grams.

Schellenbe­rg’s lawyer, Zhang Dongshuo, said on Tuesday that his client has decided to appeal, so the case may go through lengthy legal procedures.

Under the Criminal Procedure Law, the provincial high people’s court will hear the appeal. If it upholds the death penalty, the sentence must be submitted to the Supreme People’s Court, the top court, for a final review before it can be carried out, Pei said.

Monday’s conviction shows China’s consistent stance in fighting drugs, he said.

According to the Supreme People’s Court, in 2017 across China 21,733 people were given a “heavy sentence”, one exceeding five years in prison, for drugrelate­d crimes. The exact number of death sentences in drug-related conviction­s was not available.

Schellenbe­rg was not the first foreigner sentenced to death in China for drug-related offenses. In 2014, the Nantong Intermedia­te People’s Court, in Jiangsu province, sentenced a Japanese national to death for selling and transporti­ng drugs. Before that, Akmal Shaikh, a British national, was executed in December 2009 for smuggling more than 4 kilograms of heroin into China.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Canadian citizen Robert Lloyd Schellenbe­rg appears in court on Monday in Dalian, Liaoning province.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Canadian citizen Robert Lloyd Schellenbe­rg appears in court on Monday in Dalian, Liaoning province.

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