The Central Commission for Discipline Inspection reveals the details of the female officials stolen money room inventory corrupt officials hide money trick

The Communist Party of China (CPC) has been increasing its efforts to fight corruption, but many corrupt officials are still thinking of various “strange tricks” to hide their stolen money. Following Lai Xiaomin’s “wall of cash” incident, another female official was exposed to have bought a house specifically for hiding stolen money.

WeChat public number “Chang’an Street” January 8 news, the CPC Central Commission for Discipline Inspection State Supervision Commission website on the same day disclosed the former president of the Qinghai Bank, a department-level female official Wang Li gathered money and enrichment, after she had been indicted for five alleged crimes.

According to the disclosure, Wang Li bribery single up to two or three million, she bought a house specifically for hiding stolen money. The house was hidden with gold bars, musk specialties, sky-high commemorative banknotes, etc. The entire cabinet was filled with Hermes silk scarves.

The house where Lai Xiaomin hid his stolen money was revealed to have a number of safes with more than 200 million RMB in cash, as he was sentenced to death just recently by the Chinese Communist Party’s anti-corruption system.

Wang Li’s “stolen money room” was found to contain a large amount of gold bars and luxury goods.

China’s CCTV previously revealed Lai Xiaomin’s “wall of cash”.

As the Chinese Communist Party intensifies its anti-corruption efforts, corrupt officials in China have gone to great lengths to hide their cash. The walls, floors, trees, women’s toilets, special gas tanks and cesspools have all been used as hiding places.

Yuan Fengjian, the former deputy governor of Mengyin County in Shandong Province, had deposited 5.58 million yuan of public money into 37 banks in more than 100 times, and put the passbook books into tea cans and buried them in flower ponds.

Yao Jianhua, former deputy governor of Tanggu District in Tianjin, had a large amount of gold jewelry, RMB, US dollars and deposit slips hidden in his home, with a total value of more than 300,000 yuan. The screen door, the sandwich of used cartons and the flue closed with cement were all hiding places for money, even in the belly of the fish.

Xu Qiyao, the former director of Jiangsu Provincial Department of Construction, hid money inside tree holes, ash heaps, in rice paddies, under roof tiles, and some even in dung pits after wrapping.

Zhang Jinlu, former general manager of Huaihai Engineering College Logistics Service General Company, took a bribe of 390,000 yuan and put the bankbook in the exhaust fan of the women’s toilet opposite his office.