Difference between revisions of "Wu Ying"

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[[file: Wu Ying (吴英).JPEG|thumb|250px|Wu Ying (吴英)]]
  
'''Wu Ying''' (Chinese:吴英) is a Chinese entrepreneur and investor, who has been charged for fraud and embezzlement and now faces a death sentence.  
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'''Wu Ying''' ('''吴英'''), a Chinese businesswoman, was sentenced to death with a two-year reprieve for fundraising fraud by the Zhejiang Higher People's Court on May 12, 2012.
  
A technical school drop-out, Wu started her business from a small beauty salon which eventually became the entertainment conglomerate, Bense Group Co. She became the 6th richest women in [[China]] in 2006, according to the [[Hurun Fortune List]].
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Born on May 20, 1981, to a farmer's family in Dongyang, [[Zhejiang Province]], Wu was first a technical school drop-out. She started her business from a small beauty salon which eventually became the entertainment conglomerate, Bense Group Co. She became the 6th richest women in China in 2006, according to the Hurun Fortune List.
  
Born on May 20th, 1981, to a farmer’s family, Wu experienced hardship in adolescence when her father was owed millions of yuan by a developer. She earned her first fortune by selling sheep placenta essence. Several years later, she used profits from a car leasing business and South Korean clothes boutiques to acquire the Sheraton Entertainment Complex in [[Zhejiang]]. She established lots of connections when doing business with her partners and her network provided her access to much insider information.
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Wu experienced hardship in adolescence when her father was owed millions of yuan by a developer. She earned her first fortune by selling sheep placenta essence. Several years later, she used profits from a car leasing business and South Korean clothes boutiques to acquire the Sheraton Entertainment Complex in Zhejiang. She established lots of connections when doing business with her partners and her network provided her access to much insider information.
  
Unsatisfied with mere entrepreneur status, Wu ventured into the real estate and futures markets. Her shrewdness and audacity soon made her a rich woman in her hometown, Dongyang, [[Zhejiang Province]]—cradle of Chinese entrepreneurs.
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Unsatisfied with mere entrepreneur status, Wu ventured into the real estate and futures markets. Her shrewdness and audacity soon made her a rich woman in her hometown Dongyang. However, the village woman's epic rise crashed on February 10, 2007, when police cracked down all her chain stores and charged her with illegal fund-raising.
  
However, the village woman’s epic rise crashed  in February 10, 2007, when police cracked down all her chain stores and charged her with illegal fund-raising. On December 18, 2009, she was sentenced to death by the Jinhua Intermediate People’s Court in [[Zhejiang Province]].
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In December 2009, Wu was sentenced to death by the Jinhua Intermediate People's Court for cheating investors out of 380 million yuan (US$60.2 million).
  
Wu was found to have illegally raised 773.4 million yuan ($122.4 million) by promising investors high returns between May 2005 and February 2007. Of the money fraudulently pooled, 380 million yuan could not be returned and large amounts of other debts were unpaid, according to the court.
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Wu raised 770 million yuan by promising investors high returns between May 2005 and February 2007, the intermediate court found. She still had 380 million yuan as well as a large amount of unpaid debt with creditors when the case was uncovered.  
  
Wu splurged lots of the money on properties, cars and luxuries and lost in the futures market.  
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The intermediate court said Wu amassed the fortune for illegal possession by fabricating facts, deliberately hiding the truth, and promising high returns as an incentive.
  
The illegal fund-raising involves a number of local government officials and bankers who allegedly embezzled public properties for the coveted rewards. One of the highest officials that Wu identified as participating in the scheme was a vice mayor in the province.
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The Zhejiang Higher People's Court (HPC) upheld the death sentence on Jan. 18, but the Supreme People's Court overrode the judgment and sent the case back to the Zhejiang HPC for re-sentencing on April 20.
  
Questioning the verdict, Wu filed an appeal against her death sentence, which according to her, was intended to protect some of the lenders. However, on January 18, 2012, four days ahead of the Chinese Lunar New Year, the Zhengjiang Higher People’s Court upheld the previous sentence and sent the lawsuit to the Supreme People’s Court to exam.
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On May 21, 2012, the HPC in Zhejiang Province handed Wu Ying a death penalty with a two-year reprieve for fundraising fraud after retrial. The court also ordered that all Wu's personal property be confiscated, and stripped her of political rights for life in final judgment.
  
Wu’s death penalty sparked waves of public controversy. Many bloggers questioned the real intention of the court. 
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On July 11, 2014, Wu had her death sentence for illegal fund-raising commuted to life imprisonment at a trial in east China's Zhejiang Province.  
  
Chinese scholar [[Yi Zhongtian]] wrote in his weibo microblog (China’s equivalent to twitter): “I know nothing about finance or law, or Wu’s lawsuit. But here’s two points I’m clear of: First, economic criminals are rarely sentenced to death—that’s the basic legal and juridical principle. Second, part of the lawsuit remains unclear and the legal references are contentious.
 
  
“Under such conditions, is it so urgent to implement the death penalty to Wu? Rational and compassionate people would all say no,” Yi wrote.
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[[category: People]]
 
 
[[category: businesswoman]]
 
[[category: Zhejiang People]]
 

Latest revision as of 09:20, 11 July 2014

Wu Ying (吴英)

Wu Ying (吴英), a Chinese businesswoman, was sentenced to death with a two-year reprieve for fundraising fraud by the Zhejiang Higher People's Court on May 12, 2012.

Born on May 20, 1981, to a farmer's family in Dongyang, Zhejiang Province, Wu was first a technical school drop-out. She started her business from a small beauty salon which eventually became the entertainment conglomerate, Bense Group Co. She became the 6th richest women in China in 2006, according to the Hurun Fortune List.

Wu experienced hardship in adolescence when her father was owed millions of yuan by a developer. She earned her first fortune by selling sheep placenta essence. Several years later, she used profits from a car leasing business and South Korean clothes boutiques to acquire the Sheraton Entertainment Complex in Zhejiang. She established lots of connections when doing business with her partners and her network provided her access to much insider information.

Unsatisfied with mere entrepreneur status, Wu ventured into the real estate and futures markets. Her shrewdness and audacity soon made her a rich woman in her hometown Dongyang. However, the village woman's epic rise crashed on February 10, 2007, when police cracked down all her chain stores and charged her with illegal fund-raising.

In December 2009, Wu was sentenced to death by the Jinhua Intermediate People's Court for cheating investors out of 380 million yuan (US$60.2 million).

Wu raised 770 million yuan by promising investors high returns between May 2005 and February 2007, the intermediate court found. She still had 380 million yuan as well as a large amount of unpaid debt with creditors when the case was uncovered.

The intermediate court said Wu amassed the fortune for illegal possession by fabricating facts, deliberately hiding the truth, and promising high returns as an incentive.

The Zhejiang Higher People's Court (HPC) upheld the death sentence on Jan. 18, but the Supreme People's Court overrode the judgment and sent the case back to the Zhejiang HPC for re-sentencing on April 20.

On May 21, 2012, the HPC in Zhejiang Province handed Wu Ying a death penalty with a two-year reprieve for fundraising fraud after retrial. The court also ordered that all Wu's personal property be confiscated, and stripped her of political rights for life in final judgment.

On July 11, 2014, Wu had her death sentence for illegal fund-raising commuted to life imprisonment at a trial in east China's Zhejiang Province.