Getting official data on court judgements is not easy as China has been restricting access to data for people outside China and also removing existing data from its databases.
The Supreme Court’s National Court Judicial Statistics Bulletin (Gongbao) [全国法院司法统计公报] records decided criminal court cases. Decided cases are close to, but not exactly the same as, convictions. Decided cases are those that have gone to trial and reached a verdict (both guilty and non-guilty) in a court of first instance (that means it does not include appeals). Since convictions in China are near 100%, we can assume that this number is almost the same as first-instance convictions.
Gongbao only provides data by category, not by crime, so it is not possible to see the most common crime within a category. It does not include Endangering National Security crimes and may also omit other crimes or cases, so it is far from complete.
Our data on human-rights related cases were culled from our own database, the US Congressional-Executive Commission on China (CECC), and the NGO Chinese Human Rights Defenders (CHRD). There are caveats to this data, including non-random sampling and a relatively small number of cases per year due to manpower limitations.
While accepting the shortcomings of both datasets and remembering that exact comparison by year is not possible because our dataset records convictions and Gongbao records decided cases, which may not align by year, it is still interesting to compare the two.
The top crime category on Gongbao since 2018 is Endangering Public Security. For example, in 2019, 32.3% of decided cases in courts of first instance belonged to this category.
Endangering Public Security spans a wide range of illegal behaviour from dangerous driving to terrorism and hijacking a plane to selling fake medicines.
According to a notice released by the Supreme People’s Procuratorate in March 2022, the top prosecution in 2021 was in the Endangering Public Security category of dangerous driving with 351,000 defendants. Not all prosecutions reach trial so these do not equal decided court cases.
In our dataset (2009 to 2020), only three cases were Endangering Public Security.