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PRC Poodles Killer a HERO?

TeeKee

Alfrescian
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There' an old Hokkien saying, "The Quietest Dog will bite a person to death!!"

Police killer in China gets death penalty
By CARA ANNA, Associated Press Writer

capt.e31b7f304dbb4a92b34972719c42209e.china_knife_attack_xgb101.jpg


A woman applauds as a man convicted of killing six policemen is driven out of the Shanghai Higher People's Court after losing his appeal, in Shanghai, China Monday Oct. 20, 2008


SHANGHAI, China – A young man who drew a surprising amount of sympathy in China after being convicted of killing six policemen in Shanghai will get the death penalty after losing his final appeal Monday.

Dozens of angry Chinese massed outside the Shanghai Higher People's Court during the verdict. "He's a hero," one woman shouted. "The Chinese people have no right to speak," one man declared.

Widespread disgust in China over police behavior led to a wave of support for Yang Jia, who was accused of forcing his way into a Shanghai police station July 1 and killing six officers in a stabbing spree. Such violence is rare in China.

Even some state-run media published sympathetic profiles of Yang, asking what could have made the mild-mannered 28-year-old jobless man snap.

Police said Yang was taking revenge after police interrogated him on suspicion of having stolen the bike he was riding. Yang then sued the police for psychological damage, but the claim was rejected.

The original trial was closed to the media, and Shanghai media wasn't allowed to mention it. But some media and legal observers objected to Yang's lawyer in the original trial because he's a legal adviser for the Shanghai district where the attack occurred. Yang was appointed a new lawyer for his appeal.

Last week, Yang's appeal drew at least a dozen angry supporters who wore T-shirts with his face on them, but were quickly dispersed by police.

A request for further psychological testing on Yang was turned down last week, with authorities saying Yang was not insane at the time of the stabbings.

During his appeal last week, Yang agreed he didn't have a mental problem but said, "I think those cops are mentally unstable," apparently meaning the ones who interrogated him, the China Daily newspaper reported. Foreign journalists were not allowed to attend.

Yang said officers beat him during the interrogation, the report said.

Yang has no further chance to appeal, but the Supreme People's Court in Beijing will review the death sentence. China's highest court started reviewing all death sentences last year in an attempt to reduce China's number of executions, the highest in the world.
 
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