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A Different Type of Social
Power:
Underground Criminal
Organizations |
In an effort to
fight underground criminal organizations, China’s Ministry of
Public Security launched a ten-month long nationwide campaign at
the end of 2000 using the operation code-names Fox Hunting,
Raging Tide, Nill, Hurricane, and others.
It is a known fact
that a considerably large number of underground criminal
organizations have emerged in our country, and these are mainly
territory-based entities. China is divided into seven
administrative levels: state, province, municipality, county (or
larger districts and smaller cities), township, village (or
sub-district), neighborhood. These criminal organizations have
generally been formed along these lines, that is, within a
province, a city, a county, a township, or a village. Some of
the notorious criminal organizations that were outlawed several
years ago and subsequently banned are Xinjiang Gang in Shanghai,
Beijing Gang and White Shark Gang in Guangdong, Ganzhou Gang in
Jiangxi Province, and the Wolf Gang in Shanxi Province. The
membership of these organizations consists mainly of employees
of business enterprises, "waiting for work" youths, and/or
peasants. The fact that most of these gang members are friends
characterizes their inter-member relationship. Some of the
criminal organizations have a comparatively tight, linear-like
structure reinforced by harsh disciplinary measures. Members
are differentiated by ranks while the organizational structure
models that of an extended family. There are also criminal
organizations that are kinship-based (genealogical) or
occupation-based (linked by the same type of crimes committed).
Of the three types, most organizations are either
territory-based or kinship-based.
Sophisticated
Structure and Management
Both investigative
reports and revelations from cracked criminal organizations
indicate that these organizations are no longer gangsters pieced
together for a single operation; on the contrary, they are
becoming increasingly well organized and have proven to possess
some sophisticated "organizational rules" and management styles.
The following features are found in many of such organizations:
stable membership consisting mainly of professional criminals, a
multi-layer pyramid-like command system, and vertical
leadership. On the very top is the patriarch of the
organization, called "Big Brother" or "Leader." Under him are
his lieutenants called "Second Brother," "Third Brother" and so
on. The members engage in different functions. For example,
in "Sable," a criminal organization in Ziyang of Sichuan
Province, there existed the roles of "steward," "hatchet man,"
"executioner," "logistics man," and "scout." A member can be
demoted to a lower rank or removed from his post. The "Big
Brother" is often surrounded by a group of advisers to help plan
the activities. Further down are people to carry out murders as
well as robbery, and people to maintain legitimate business
fronts while engaging in money laundering. They also have their
own ways of allocating wealth and providing benefits according
to ranks. Tight control is sustained by rigid rules and
security regulations. Those who disobey the boss or betray the
organization are cruelly punished.
According to a
report by the Criminal Investigation Office of Sichuan Public
Security Department, underground organizations nowadays have
started to emulate management styles of a modern corporation.
The Di Shaowei Clan in Sichuan Province is a typical case. They
have their own "Member Handbook" which contains four chapters
with seventeen articles and serves as their "criminal law." The
handbook specifies that whomever gives out confidential
information, betrays the organization, jeopardizes its
interests, or disobeys orders is subject to penalty measures
ranging from cutting off the tongue, gouging out eyes, chopping
off fingers, hands, or legs, or, ultimately, death. Some
researchers have stated that the "current underground criminal
organizations in China possess some unique features due to the
fact that they both inherited the traits of the traditional
triads and old gangster organizations and imitated sophisticated
criminal groups abroad." These domestic criminal groups are
little different than their counterparts in other countries,
embodying all the necessary features of an underground criminal
organization. Underground criminal organizations in the true
meaning of the term have emerged in our country; therefore,
their presence should not be ignored by those studying Chinese
criminality and those working in law enforcement agencies.
The membership of
criminal organizations tends to be young. They are either
criminals at large or have spent time in prison or
reeducation-through-labor camps; many of them have committed
murder. They are young and daring, with no sense of morality.
They are also determined and decisive, and are not afraid of
taking ruthless actions. All these characteristics make them
cold-blooded individuals. Some of them are ex-servicemen and
thus have received formal military training. These
ex-servicemen often become key figures, as they know how to
operate weapons and fight battles, and are knowledgeable about
police operations. In addition, the organization finds it
convenient to use their old "comrades-in-arms" for cover
operations.
Nowadays these
organizations have a variety of sources for weaponry and are
becoming increasingly better equipped. In the past, they relied
on hunting rifles, homemade guns, and stolen weapons, but now
with their much stronger financial capabilities, they can easily
acquire smuggled weapons. Ironically, some of these weapons were
initially sold by the Chinese government to foreign countries,
but managed to find their way back into the country and fall
into the hands of criminals.
Advanced technology
is helping to improve the way criminal organizations conduct
their business. Before taking an action, they carefully
investigate the site, study the internal circumstances, collect
other relevant information, and decide on timing and an exit
route. They have several plans to choose from, each being
subjected to repeated analyses and testing. They are always
best prepared in fraud cases involving extremely large amounts
of money. They work diligently in preparation, and leave the
"legal person"--whom they hired earlier--to face the
consequences if the scheme is uncovered. When an operation is
successfully carried out, the perpetrators have a means of
transportation to quickly escape from the scene, and the gang
leaders will relocate immediately to another city or to a
foreign country. As a result, it takes a tremendous amount of
police force and money to track them down. For example, Lu Wei,
a gang leader in Jianyang of Fujian Province, stopped at dozens
of cities, including Beijing and Shanghai, after committing a
crime. He was constantly on the run and often switched hotels
at night. It took the police several hundred workdays and
hundreds of thousands of Chinese yuan to finally catch him.
The Merging of
the "Black" and the "White": Gang Leaders with "Red Hats"
All investigations,
including those of a few major cases already solved, point to a
fundamental cause that enables the criminal organizations to
flourish within a short period of time. That is, the gangs are
well entrenched in the local political structure, particularly
in law enforcement agencies, and thus are well protected by
corrupt public officials. In comparison with their counterparts
in the West, criminal organizations in Mainland China (the
"black") have a deeper penetration into the social
establishments (the "White"). In the West, the criminal
organizations could be connected with law enforcement agencies
and the judiciary, while in China their influence reaches not
only the police and judges, but also those holding political and
government offices. Some gang leaders themselves have acquired
high-ranking political status (so-called "Red hats"). Zhang Wei
from Wenling of Zhejiang Province is a good example. Not only
was he the boss of his criminal organization, he also held eight
public offices in several provinces and municipalities. He was
vice chairman of the People's Political Consultative Conference
of Yidu City, Hubei province, member of the Municipal Youth
League Committee of Taizhou City, honorary president of a
newspaper in Zhejiang province, vice president of the Young
Entrepreneurs Association of Taizhou City, legal representative
and chairman of the East Sea Group in Zhejiang province, legal
representative and manager of Dongsheng Corporation in Shanghai,
legal representative and general manager of Wenling Hengji
Industrial Corporation, and legal representative and general
manager of Taizhou New Century Decoration Co. Ltd.. He obtained
the first four titles by bribing public officials and those
titles served him well. He was found to have connections with
officials in key positions, including the mayor and police
chief. Of the sixty-seven public officials having close ties
with him, forty-two were in government or party offices, fifteen
in the judiciary, and ten in banking. For this reason his
organization was called the "Red-Black Gang," and this is indeed
an accurate description. It was black because the organization
was mainly underground, but at the same time it had a red cover
due to its links with public officials.
In recent years
quite a few major underground criminal organizations have been
cracked in Jilin Province. Not long ago, Liang Xudong, head of
the largest criminal organization in Jilin Province, was
executed. He himself was a police officer and also had ties
with over thirty government and party officials. Of these
connections, there were political appointees as well as those
holding offices in the Public Security Bureau, the Procuratorate,
and the judiciary. For a long period of time, these officials
provided Liang Xudong with cover, leaving his organization free
to perform their criminal acts for years. Liang Xudong had
access to thirty-five public officials; his network included
twelve department heads in government, ten police officers, five
public procurators, and four judges. It was under the
protection of these public officials that Liang Xudong and his
gang developed into a powerful force in that region. In Jilin’s
Helong City, Gu Decheng and his gang had grown to a criminal
organization with considerable notoriety when Gu himself was
elected member of the city’s People's Political Consultative
Conference and representative of the city’s People’s Congress.
Liu Yong of Liaoning Province was both a gang boss and a
well-known public figure. To outsiders, he was a member of
Shenyang City’s People’s Congress in addition to being president
of Shenyang Jiayang Group, and year after year his company was
granted the title of Advanced Enterprise by the municipal
government. Of the sixteen key members of this gang, three were
police officers. Zhou Shounan was head of a criminal group in
Baise of Guangxi Province. The public knew him as general
manager of the entertainment department of Baise Hotel while in
the underground he led a gang, Hongxing Society, which
controlled the gambling business in the city. When his criminal
activities were brought to light, the involvement of several key
officials became known, including the former chief of the city
police, Nong Jiayi, and the police chief in office, Li Hongzhuan.
Also involved were political commissar of the police department
Ma Sike, deputy police chief Huang Zhengxian, former commander
of the public security team within the police department Liang
Xincheng, and former deputy chief of the prefecture police
department Tan Xueren.
People have been
shocked by recent revelations of one criminal organization in
Pingdingshan City, Henan Province. This organization had eleven
members, among them six were members of a village committee, one
was a probationary member of the communist party, and three were
candidates for party membership. In eight years they committed
over three hundred armed robberies targeted at private coal mine
owners, victimized more than one hundred twenty innocent people
of whom six were murdered, and got away with a total of one
million and a half yuan. The fact that these people are able to
hold dual roles, one in public and one underground, is more
alarming than those criminals relying exclusively on bribery of
officials.
Even more
disturbing is the fact that gangsters have infiltrated into
county and municipal level governing bodies. They pick their
"surrogates" from other officials, even playing a role in
assigning county and municipal administrative positions. In
this way, social establishments controlled by corrupted
officials have become a tool for organized criminals to prey
upon their communities. It is the worst scenario one can
imagine when the "white" and the "black" merge, namely, society
is ruled by collaborating forces of public officials,
particularly those in law enforcement, and criminal
organizations.
Employment of
Gangsters In Power Jockeying
It is also obvious
that the values held by criminals have started to permeate
social behavior. Underground criminal organizations’
involvement in political life has appeared in several aspects.
In recent years, certain pubic officials would seek criminal
organizations’ assistance when they fail to overpower their
opponents in political maneuvers. It is against this background
that incidents of "officials killing officials" have become
quite plentiful. I present here a few publicized cases. In
1995 in Anyi County, county magistrate Chen Jinyun hired
assassins to kill Hu Cigan, party secretary of that county, and
Wan Xianyong, deputy party secretary; in March, 1997 in Yangchun
City of Guangdong Province, municipal party secretary Yan Wenyao,
deputy mayor Yang Qizhou, deputy director of Finance Office Lin
Qiju were involved in a plot to murder the mayor and some of his
associates; on June 28, 1999, former party secretary Li Changhe
of Wugang City, had his subordinate Lu Jing, magistrate of Batai
Township, and Lu’s wife murdered; on March 16, 1999, a tax
collector in Hainan Province assassinated Huang Chonghua, a
public procurator; on March 26, 1999, the director of Fushun
City's Judicial Bureau attempted to murder a county party
secretary. All these cases involved underground criminal
organizations. Some of the assassins were gang members, and
some were "marginal" members of society.
The game in China’s
political circles is seldom played fairly. It is frequently the
case that one’s competitive performance does not lead to
promotion, and therefore public officials have to resort to
other means that have nothing to do with his/her ethics,
ability, and performance. This way of selecting public
officials causes the entire society to suffer from its
consequences. With the introduction of influence by organized
criminals, the process has become more chaotic and will
certainly further erode the selection mechanism for public
officials.
From "Black
Income" to "Gray Income" to "White Income"
¾Involvement by Underground Criminal Organizations in Economic
Activities
Underground
criminal organizations started long ago to build their financial
base. The entertainment circles were the first to breed
underground crime elements and to be heavily impacted by
underground criminal organizations. There was a special report
entitled “Underground Criminal Organizations in Entertainment”
in the February 10, 2001 edition of Yangcheng Evening News. The
entertainment industry provides an ideal place for fame and
profit. At a time when there are insufficient earnings, this
industry proves to be a safe haven for money laundering.
Currently the underground criminal elements within entertainment
circles still have not fully matured, while the outside forces
have established their influences. In the past few years, a
number of cases caught public attention, such as the
assassination of Ju Peng, the attempted murder of Mao Ning, as
well as the beating up of some other star performers. The degree
of violence employed by the underground forces in entertainment
is, however, less apparent in comparison with some other circles
in this industry.
Reports on the
recent "eradicating underground criminal organization campaign"
indicate that almost all criminal organizations are well
financed, and all resort to violence in their efforts to collect
wealth. Some gathered this wealth entirely by illegal means.
Zhou Shounan is such an example. His open position was general
manager of the entertainment department of Baise Hotel, but,
behind the scenes, all gambling operations in the city were
under his control. All his riches were generated this way. Liu
Yong, president of Shenyang Jiayang Group, was different in that
he was involved in both legal and illegal business activities,
and employed illegal means in legal business operations. He
accumulated seven hundred million yuan in a matter of several
short years. Some organizations have a more cruel way of doing
business, as shown in what Liang Shengli and his gang did in
Xuchang, Henan Province. They operated a legal business in an
illegal fashion. For example, they would use violence to drive
out those already in the business if he wanted to be part of the
trade. By adopting similar means his group became dominant in
many trades in that region, including the garment, shoes and
hats, construction, construction materials, transportation, and
hospitality sectors. They also designated areas of influence
for their members. They used violence to force customers to buy
and suppliers to sell on their own terms and to collect
protection fees and dividends. Thus the situation became
outrageous: whatever trade they wanted to set foot in, the
existing merchants would have to "automatically withdraw" for
fear of disastrous consequences. In comparison, however, most
small and medium-size gangs rely on collecting protection fees.
The masterpiece of
their financial buildup is found in a recently revealed case in
Lanzhou, where the criminal organizations plundered people of
several hundred million yuan with artificial stock brokerages.
According to reports, a number of stock brokerages appeared in
Lanzhou City in 2000 such as Gangsu New China Investment
Consulting, Lanzhou Lixin Economic Information Consulting,
Lanzhou Xinda Economic Information Consulting, Wanweida Economic
Information Consulting, Hansu Mid Asia Finance, Guotai Finance,
Xinlande Quantum Office, Gansu Gold Trade Co., Tiansheng Trade,
and Gansu Aoran Trust. These firms settled down in remote areas
or rented suites in high rises in downtown areas, then set up a
simulated stock transaction system with a few dozen computers to
process stock performance information obtained through satellite
dishes, Internet providers, or cable TV. In such a manner, they
swindled several hundred million yuan from their customers who
had no idea that their money would go directly into the
criminals’ pocket instead of entering the stock market.
Investigations indicate that only a handful of people were the
masterminds behind the scene. They invested the embezzled money
in legal business operations, mainly real estate. In this way,
some of the major players even became distinguished personages
in the business circles of Lanzhou or even the Northwest
region. Their connections are found in every corner in the
political arena. When the Lanzhou City Industry & Commerce
Bureau reported these fraud cases to the city’s Public Security
Bureau, the latter refused to take action for "lack of
sufficient evidence," and thus the criminals were able to
continue with their wrong doings (Southern City Report, February
6, 2001). They did not stop even when CCTV’s "Thirty Minutes on
Economy" aired a series of reports on their criminal acts.
Internationalization of Criminal Organizations
The influence of
the sophisticated criminal organizations in Hong Kong and Macao
is on the rise. Not only are the relatively "unenlightened"
organizations in the Mainland making efforts to emulate them,
there have also been an increasing number of cases that were the
result of collaborative undertakings by criminals from both the
Mainland and these two areas. Gangsters from Hong Kong and
Macao are particularly active in coastal areas. They take
advantage of the current political and economic circumstances in
the Mainland, where foreign capital is badly needed for economic
reforms. Many people in both government and business circles
are eager to achieve rapid growth by attracting foreign capital
while there is no effective management and control measures.
Consequently, they set up briefcase companies, make a fortune
by fraud, and then disappear after the money is transferred
abroad. Many such instances have caused tremendous losses to
our country. These criminal groups do not stop there. They use
a portion of the money to buy party and public officials. In
December 2000, Guangzhou City’s law enforcement forces uncovered
an underground bank and arrested nine suspects, four of whom
were from Taiwan. Police retrieved a very large sum of Chinese
currency, some foreign currency, as well as many certificates of
deposit used for money laundering from this illegal bank. One
suspect by the name of Huang Awan admitted that the four members
from Taiwan had been engaged in foreign currency laundering
since 1998, and their business was mainly to help Taiwan
businessmen transfer funds illegally from the Mainland to
Taiwan. Their one-day transaction volume sometimes was as high
as several million yuan. In the course of a couple of years
they had transferred fifty-eight million yuan.
Narcotics
trafficking has become rampant internationally since the 1980s,
and drug traffickers are also in contact with China’s criminal
organizations. They work together to operate drug trafficking
networks in China. Also, stealing cultural relics is becoming
widespread. While the Three George Project has attracted much
of the world’s attention for various reasons, most alluring to
the criminals are the cultural relics at this historical site
some of which date to over three thousand years. The site has
become the hottest spot of cultural relics theft. It is
estimated by foreign media that in the past twenty years or so a
very large quantity of such national treasures have been
smuggled out to the west, more than the stolen items added
together in all previous years. Some extremely precious
Neolithic items have also been sold to foreign countries. The
organized criminals also engage themselves in smuggling people.
In the early days, they were mainly involved in abducting and
selling women and children. Now, their primary business is
illegal immigrant trafficking. These organizations are often
referred to as “snake gangs.” The criminal organizations in
Fujian Province play a key role in these operations. They are
known for smuggling goods, people trafficking, and cross-border
kidnapping. Some reports suggest that they have smuggled
counterfeit Chinese currencies in the amount of ten to twenty
billion yuan. Police have also seized over one thousand
kilograms of ice (crystal meth) from these gangs. In five cases
involving gun sales, police confiscated over three thousand guns
plus over seventy thousand rounds of ammunition. But, these
gangs are best known for immigrant smuggling. By the end of
1998, fourteen hundred snakeheads had been captured in that
province, twenty thousand migrants were stopped on the seas, and
over thirty thousand migrants had been returned from abroad.
The number of cross-boarder kidnapping cases in this year is
mind-boggling. In fact, over fifty such cases have happened in
Fujian since 1993, with a huge sum of ransom money totaling
several million US dollars. These cases were carried out
jointly by domestic and foreign-based criminal organizations,
involving many countries and areas such as the United States,
Great Britain, Australia, Thailand, Hong Kong, and Taiwan.
In addition to what
is described above, there are other equally alarming incidents.
For instance, in some places the police "employ criminals to
control criminals" or uniformed agents in charge of city
management and transportation hire gangsters to collect
extravagant fees. Moreover, in certain areas criminal
organizations even function as government agencies. For
instance, in Zhengzhou of Henan Province, the gangsters that
were running "Tianma Shoe City" put the neighborhood committee
and industry and commerce station out of work. The fact that
these organizations can recruit easily from the increasing
number of unemployed personnel has sounded a warning that the
mission to overcome these criminal organizations is going to be
extremely time-consuming and challenging.
Undoubtedly the
underground criminal organizations are affecting our society in
an increasingly significant way, and have virtually become one
type of "public authority" in certain areas and circles,
particularly for those living at the bottom of the society.
Their presence, sanctioned by corrupted public officials,
clearly constitutes an ominous threat to people’s safety and
wellbeing. Past experience, both at home and abroad, tells us
that for the general public even tyranny is "more lenient" than
those violent and ruthless underground criminal organizations.

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