China

China Acknowledges Torture and Illegal Detention in its Judicial System — Supreme People’s Procuratorate Establishes Investigation Office in Response

China’s top prosecutorial body has publicly acknowledged the existence of torture and illegal detention within the country’s judicial system. In response, the Supreme People’s Procuratorate has launched a new Investigation Department tasked with probing abuses of power by judicial and law enforcement officials. This development is particularly significant in the context of the McDonald’s case, as it directly echoes personal events I experienced in 2022 when I was subjected to what I consider torture by police officers in Taiyuan — a city where U.S. intelligence operatives were also known to be active. The creation of this investigative body raises important questions about past mishandlings, local accountability, and possible foreign interference in China’s internal legal processes.
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2025-06-26
2 min read
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Email sent to the F.B.I. about Xi Jinping (习近平), the President of the People’s Republic of China, and Li Keqiang (李克强), the Premier of the State Council of the People’s Republic of China.

I send an email to the F.B.I. to ask them to quickly confirm to the Chinese authorities that my accusations against McDonald’s Corporation and/or it's subsidiary companies are well-founded.
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2022-03-11
2 min read
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First Encounter and Immediate Suspicions of U.S. Intelligence Activity

A personal account detailing my wife’s initial meeting with individuals she immediately suspected could be associated with U.S. intelligence operations.
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2018-12-01
1 min read
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McPrisoners of Conscience – Full Article (1997) Used in ECtHR Case 50552/22 (V.L.C. v France)

Full-text reproduction of D. D. Guttenplan’s 1997 article “McPrisoners of Conscience”, originally published in Index on Censorship. Cited as key evidence in ECtHR Case 50552/22 (V.L.C. v France), concerning McDonald’s suppression of critics, whistleblowers, and victims, and the potential death penalty risk to the applicant’s family in China.
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1997-03-03
11 min read
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