Top Chinese Lottery Officials Paraded After Possible $20 Billion Embezzlement

Top Chinese Lottery Officials Paraded After Possible $20 Billion Embezzlement.

Costfoto / NurPhoto / Getty Images

Key Takeaways

Fourteen Chinese lottery officials are rumored to have siphoned off $20 billion from the state-owned Welfare Lottery.

Chinese lotteryWang Suying, the former director of the China Welfare Lottery Issuance Management Center, confesses to embezzling funds in a video published by the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection last week. (Image: CCDI)

On November 9, the Chinese Communist Party’s internal disciplinary agency published videos on its website showing four senior lottery officials confessing to the embezzlement of an undisclosed amount of money from the lottery fund, while expressing remorse for their actions.

Subsequent reports in the Chinese media suggested that a total of 14 people had been involved in the crime and cited the extraordinary $20 billion figure.

The Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI) later confirmed that 14 were under investigation but denied as much as $20 billion had been stolen, adding that exact figures were “inconvenient” to publish at this time.

Chinese media has said that, based on available data, $20 billion is possible if the embezzlement took place over a number of years.

Quarter of Funds Misappropriated

The Welfare Lottery is huge. Played by some 300 million people, it generated more than $31 billion in revenues last year, which are intended to go to help the orphans, the elderly, people with disabilities, and the poor. Along with the Sports Lottery, it is the notable exception to mainland China’s blanket ban on gambling.

The lottery fund is made up of the pennies donated by lottery players. How would our hundreds of millions of lottery players react if management of the funds is problematic?” state discipline inspector Gong Tanghua asked during the taped confessions, according to The Times.

In 2015, a national audit examined a sample sum of $7 billion worth of lottery funds over a three-year period and found that a quarter had been misappropriated.

Threat to the Party

China’s President Xi Jinping has waged war on corruption since taking office in 2012, saying it threatens the very survival of the Communist Party. Graft has long been endemic in Chinese politics, but Xi’s “corruption crackdown” is also used as a convenient pretext to eliminate political opponents.

Scores of senior party officials from the government, the military, and state-owned enterprises have been arrested and handed lengthy prison terms over the past few years.

Recent prominent figures to have been caught up in the crackdown include former Internet czar , the architect of China’s “Great Firewall” online censorship program, and , who was head of Interpol until he was detained in China in September.

In October, China’s chief official in Macau, Zheng Xiaosong, was reported to have died after falling from a building. While Macau Police said they did not suspect foul play, BBC China reported that seven Chinese officials had fallen from buildings this year alone, six with fatal consequences.

Article Sources
MGM Reserved in Outlook for BetMGM editorial policy.
  1. Biloxi Casino Pitch Stalled Over 15 Years Gains Site Approval

Compare Accounts
×
Station-Managed North Fork Mono Tribal Casino Breaks Ground
Provider
Name
Description
L.A. Deputy Accused of Robbing Poker Player Sees Case Dropped  Las Vegas Sands on Trial: $12B Breach of Contract Case Kicks Off in Macau  Winning Lottery Tickets Are Being Smuggled into Macau and China from Hong Kong  American Gaming Association Urges Feds to Go After Unregulated Gambling Machines  Seminole Tribe Slammed For Taking Sports Bets in Florida Despite Judge’s Order  Las Vegas Rooms Available One Night Before Big F1 Race — And Cheap!  New Details Emerge About Casino-Robbing Las Vegas Couple  Las Vegas Sands on Trial: $12B Breach of Contract Case Kicks Off in Macau  VEGAS RESTAURANT ROUNDUP: Pitbull to Open First Vegas Eatery  Las Vegas Strip Alleged Prostitute Apprehended in Police Undercover Sting