Off the wire
Spotlight: EU lawmakers postpone debate due to row over TTIP  • Australia warns about global reach of Islamic State group at violent extremism summit  • Australia's unemployment rate drops, underemployment also lower  • Urgent: China retail sales up 10.1 pct in May  • China's Jan.-May fixed asset investment up 11.4 pct  • Roundup: New Zealand interest rate cut highlights economic challenges ahead  • 5.7-manitude quake jolts off northeastern Japan, no tsunami risk  • Spotlight: China makes active contribution to world poverty reduction  • Xinhua Insight: China promotes cross-border e-commerce to drive trade growth  • Across China: Couple save 67 neighbors before building topples  
You are here:   Home

Review of high-profile China rape and murder case prolonged

Xinhua, June 11, 2015 Adjust font size:

The higher people's court in east China's Shandong Province has decided to extend the review of a rape and murder case in which a young man was executed 20 years ago, only to have another man confess to the crime years later.

The review of the case of Nie Shubin will end Sept. 15, three months later than the previous deadline, due to the "significance, difficulty and complexity" of the case, Xinhua learned from the court.

Zhu Yunsan, presiding judge of the review panel, announced the decision, which was approved by the Supreme People's Court (SPC), to Nie's family and their two lawyers on Thursday.

Nie, a native of Hebei Province, which neighbors Shandong, was 21 when he was convicted and executed for the rape and murder of a woman in Hebei's capital, Shijiazhuang. However, in 2005, Wang Shujin said he was responsible for the crime.

In December 2014, five judges from the provincial higher court started to review the case. Nie's family lawyers were allowed to read the case files.

The case is similar to a 1996 case from Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, where a teenager named Huugjilt was executed for the rape and murder of a woman in June 1996. A self-confessed serial rapist and killer later admitted to the crime while in police custody in 2005.

In December 2014, Huugjilt was acquitted by the regional higher people's court. His parents were awarded state compensation of more than 2 million yuan (327,060 U.S. dollars). Endi