Former Haikou Party chief gets death sentence with reprieve

In a significant judicial ruling underscoring China’s intensified anti-corruption campaign, Luo Zengbin, the former Communist Party chief of Haikou, has been handed a death sentence with a two-year reprieve for massive bribery offenses. The Chenzhou Intermediate People’s Court in Hainan province delivered the verdict on Saturday, concluding a high-profile case involving illicit gains exceeding 317 million yuan ($46.22 million).

The court determined that Luo systematically exploited his influential positions across Sichuan and Hainan provinces to provide unlawful advantages to various entities and individuals. His corrupt activities spanned business operations, project contracts, procedural facilitation, and fund allocation during his tenure. The court characterized the magnitude of bribes accepted as ‘extremely large’ and the consequent damage to national and public interests as ‘extremely huge,’ warranting the severe penalty.

Despite the gravity of offenses, the judiciary extended sentencing leniency considering Luo’s cooperative stance during investigations. The former official provided substantial information regarding other major cases, voluntarily disclosed previously unknown bribery incidents, demonstrated confessionary compliance, and proactively returned ill-gotten assets. Additionally, the court noted certain bribery attempts that ultimately proved unsuccessful.

Beyond the suspended capital punishment, the sentence includes permanent deprivation of political rights, comprehensive confiscation of personal assets, and mandatory transfer of all illicit gains and associated interests to the state treasury.

Luo’s professional trajectory, which began in 1990, included prominent roles as mayor of Guang’an and Party chief in Mianyang within his native Sichuan province before assuming leadership positions in Hainan in 2022. His downfall commenced with disciplinary investigation in December 2024, followed by expulsion from the Party and public office in May 2025. Formal indictment on bribery charges occurred five months thereafter, culminating in last year’s public trial and Saturday’s sentencing.