Report on women criminals in China including cutting off penises of husbands
Posted: Sat Apr 29, 2017 1:00 pm
http://www.womenofchina.cn/html/report/94105-1.htm
http://www.womenofchina.cn/womenofchina ... 8080-1.htm
According to the Nanjing municipal procuratorate, 2,140 women were accused for various actions of misconduct in the past three years, accounting for 8.76 percent of the total accused population in the capital city of Jiangsu Province. The proportion of accused women has increased annually. Seventy percent of the female suspects are under 35 years old. The crimes may vary in degree from theft to intentional harm to drug trafficking and pimp.
Crime Caused by Impulsion in Emotional Crisis
Different from men, women tend to commit crimes when they have conflicts with their lovers.
Procurators working in rural areas of Nanjing admitted that there had been several cases, in which the wife intentionally harmed her husband by cutting off his penis. A procurator on the case said: "Their reasons are simple. The wife could not bear the fact that her husband is gambling or cheating on her. It is a crime of impulsion in an emotional crisis." Li Aijun, director of the public prosecution branch in the Nanjing municipal procuratorate, said: "Women are always vulnerable to harm in a relationship and marriage. It is hard for them to change their situation. So they tend to use an extreme means."
The Gaochun Procuratorate of Nanjing has dealt with several intentional harm cases, in which women committed crimes when they had an emotional crisis. A female defendant killed her husband out of rage, for she failed to talk him out of a relationship and bring him back to their marriage.
Legal Education and Aid
Li Aijun believed that women's crimes caused by impulsion in love conflicts could be avoided, said, "We could improve legal education for them, and establish a social aid system for them, covering psychological guidance, career consultancy and legal aid."
In cases concerning female suspects, 80 percent of the women are charged with a suspended sentence or a sentence less than three years. Sun Xiaozhong, deputy director of the Nanjing Bureau of Justice, said that it is a better choice to sentence women who have committed minor crimes with a non-imprisonment penalty and send them back home. It is for their own good, and society as well.
http://www.womenofchina.cn/womenofchina ... 8080-1.htm
According to the Nanjing municipal procuratorate, 2,140 women were accused for various actions of misconduct in the past three years, accounting for 8.76 percent of the total accused population in the capital city of Jiangsu Province. The proportion of accused women has increased annually. Seventy percent of the female suspects are under 35 years old. The crimes may vary in degree from theft to intentional harm to drug trafficking and pimp.
Crime Caused by Impulsion in Emotional Crisis
Different from men, women tend to commit crimes when they have conflicts with their lovers.
Procurators working in rural areas of Nanjing admitted that there had been several cases, in which the wife intentionally harmed her husband by cutting off his penis. A procurator on the case said: "Their reasons are simple. The wife could not bear the fact that her husband is gambling or cheating on her. It is a crime of impulsion in an emotional crisis." Li Aijun, director of the public prosecution branch in the Nanjing municipal procuratorate, said: "Women are always vulnerable to harm in a relationship and marriage. It is hard for them to change their situation. So they tend to use an extreme means."
The Gaochun Procuratorate of Nanjing has dealt with several intentional harm cases, in which women committed crimes when they had an emotional crisis. A female defendant killed her husband out of rage, for she failed to talk him out of a relationship and bring him back to their marriage.
Legal Education and Aid
Li Aijun believed that women's crimes caused by impulsion in love conflicts could be avoided, said, "We could improve legal education for them, and establish a social aid system for them, covering psychological guidance, career consultancy and legal aid."
In cases concerning female suspects, 80 percent of the women are charged with a suspended sentence or a sentence less than three years. Sun Xiaozhong, deputy director of the Nanjing Bureau of Justice, said that it is a better choice to sentence women who have committed minor crimes with a non-imprisonment penalty and send them back home. It is for their own good, and society as well.