The former Communist Party of China (CPC) vice chief of southwest China's Sichuan Province, Li Chuncheng, was prosecuted on Thursday for accepting bribes and abuse of power, the Supreme People's Procuratorate (SPP) said in a statement.
The SPP has concluded its investigation and transferred the case to Xianning People's Procuratorate in the central province of Hubei. Charges were filed with Xianning Intermediate People's Court on Thursday, according to the statement.
Prosecutors believe Li took advantage of his position to seek profit for others, accepted huge amounts of money and abused his power, resulting in substantial state losses.
Li was put under disciplinary investigation in October 2012 and the SPP started its investigation in April 2014.
Also in April 2014, he was removed from his public post and stripped of his membership of the CPC. (Updated)
Read more:
Ex-security chief ‘had ties with other top graft suspects‘
2015-03-17New bureau set to boost graft fight
2015-03-14Teamwork crucial for graft battle
2015-03-13Graft fight given a sharper focus
2015-03-13‘Tigers‘ caught in graft probe triple: Top procurator
2015-03-12Promotion and removal system key in anti-graft drive
2015-03-12Zhou exerted ‘baneful‘ influence in Sichuan
2015-01-26Harm from Zhou Yongkang being cleaned up
2015-01-22Zhou Yongkang closer to trial date
2015-01-08Ex-Wuxi chief linked to Zhou Yongkang
2015-01-07Copyright ©1999-2018
Chinanews.com. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.