
A former city official from Nanjing has been sentenced to death following a historic corruption trial in eastern China, marking another major milestone in President Xi Jinping’s long-running anti-graft campaign.
Yang Youlin, 69, was found guilty by a court in Changzhou on Monday, July 6, 2026, of accepting over 2.2bn yuan ($325m) in bribes over a three-decade career. The court proceedings revealed that Yang, who held various economic and technological development posts in Nanjing between 1993 and 2023, utilized his influence to facilitate favorable outcomes for third parties in engineering contracts, land transfers, and financing.
Beyond the massive bribery charges, the court convicted Yang of embezzlement, abuse of power, and money laundering. In its ruling, the court characterized his criminal conduct as being “of an extremely serious nature,” asserting that his actions inflicted “exceptionally heavy losses to the interests of the state and the people.”
While President Xi’s sweeping anti-corruption initiatives have targeted thousands of officials across the military, banking, and government sectors, capital punishment for white-collar crime remains a severe, albeit infrequent, measure. Judicial experts note that death sentences are typically reserved for cases where the illicit gains exceed 1bn yuan.
Precedent for such harsh sentencing has been established previously. In 2021, former finance executive Lai Xiaomin was executed for taking 1.8bn yuan in bribes, followed by the 2024 execution of former Inner Mongolia official Li Jianping for crimes totaling 3bn yuan.
During the trial, the defense noted that Yang had pleaded guilty and offered cooperation to authorities. However, the Changzhou court maintained that the sheer scale of the corruption rendered any potential leniency inappropriate. Although Yang expressed remorse during his final statement, the presiding judges ruled that his assistance was insufficient to mitigate the severity of his offenses.
The case serves as a stark reminder of the Chinese leadership’s persistent efforts to curb systemic corruption, a campaign that observers have noted occasionally coincides with the political consolidation of power. While many high-level corruption cases result in life imprisonment—often via commuted suspended death sentences—the ruling against Yang signals that the state intends to maintain a rigid stance against the highest tiers of financial misconduct.
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