BEIJING (AP) â" A former police chief whose flight to a U.S. consulate set off Chinaâs biggest political scandal in years has been charged with crimes including defection and bribe taking, possibly indicating the turbulent affair is moving closer to a resolution before a key national leadership transition this fall.
Wednesday eveningâs announcement by state media of the charges against Wang Lijun did not mention Bo Xilai, his one-time boss, who has fallen from power as one of Chinaâs top leaders as a result of the scandal.
Wang, the former police chief and vice mayor of the southwestern city of Chongqing, was also charged with ââbending the law for selfish endsââ and abuse of power, the official Xinhua News Agency said.
Wang set off the scandal by fleeing to the U.S. consulate in the nearby city of Chengdu in early February after being demoted by Bo, the cityâs powerful Communist Party boss. Xinhua said the Chengdu City Intermediate Peopleâs Court had accepted the case, although it did not give a trial date.
During his overnight stay at the U.S. consulate, Wang expressed to the Americans his concerns about the death of British businessman Neil Heywood in Chongqing last November. That prompted the British embassy to request a new investigation, which uncovered that he had been murdered. The case resulted in Boâs dismissal in March and the conviction last month of Boâs wife Gu Kailai for poisoning Heywood, a former family associate with whom Gu had reportedly feuded about money.
Gu was given a suspended death sentence while Bo remains under investigation by the ruling partyâs disciplinary branch for unspecified grave violations of discipline. Three leading Chongqing police officers and a Bo family aide were also sentenced as accomplices in the murder and subsequent cover-up.
The charismatic Bo had been one of Chinaâs most prominent politicians and was considered a candidate for the all-powerful Politburo Standing Committee at the upcoming Communist Party national congress, expected to be held next month.
University of Miami China expert June Teufel Dreyer said authorities might be holding back in the face of a lack of consensus or uncertainty how to proceed within such a tight time frame.
ââThe doorâs still open to prosecute Bo at a future time, and it is possible that Wangâs trial will attempt to draw Bo into the murder-cover-up intrigue,ââ Dreyer said.
ââThe more attention can be diverted from so high-level, and reputedly fairly popular, personage, the better,ââ she said.
Chinese courts rarely rule in favor of the defendant, and Wangâs conviction is inevitable. Xinhua left no doubt about that, saying ââProsecutors said facts related to Wang Lijunâs crimes were clear; the evidence was concrete and abundant.ââ
The attorney Wang Yuncai said Thursday she has been approved by the court to serve as Wang Lijunâs defense lawyer. She said the court would decide whether the trial would be closed to the public, and that according to Chinese law that would be based on whether the case involves state secrets or personal privacy issues.
Xinhua said that according to the indictment, Wang knew that Gu was under serious suspicion of murdering Heywood, but ââconsciously neglected his duty and bent the law for personal gainââ so Gu would not be held legally responsible.
It also said Wang ââleft his post without authorization and defected to the United States Consulate General in Chengdu.ââ It is not known if he made a direct request for asylum, something U.S. diplomats say they would not have been able to grant.
Xinhua said that according to the indictment, Wang knew Gu was under serious suspicion of murdering Heywood, but ââconsciously neglected his duty and bent the law for personal gainââ so Gu would not be held legally responsible.
It said Wang ââleft his post without authorization and defected to the United States Consulate General in Chengdu.ââ
Xinhua said the abuse of power charge relates to Wangâs illegal use of ââtechnical reconnaissance measures.ââ He is accused of taking ââmassive bribes in a bid to secure benefits for other individuals.ââ No details were given for the last two charges.
Unconfirmed reports said he had cooperated closely with investigators after leaving the consulate accompanied by agents from Chinaâs main intelligence agency, the Ministry of State Security.
In another sign that Bo was without support at the highest levels, one of his previous vocal backers, Zhou Yongkang, Chinaâs security chief, was quoted on the front page of the Peopleâs Daily on Thursday as praising the work down by courts in Hefei in Anhui province. A court in that city convicted Gu last month in a one-day trial.Continued...

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