Hong Kong court overturns Jimmy Lai's fraud conviction amid ongoing imprisonment

Hong Kong's Court of Appeal overturned media tycoon Jimmy Lai's 2022 fraud conviction on Thursday, nullifying a nearly six-year sentence. The pro-democracy figure, a fierce Beijing critic detained since 2020, remains imprisoned on a 20-year national security term imposed earlier this month.

Jimmy Lai, 78, won his appeal against the fraud conviction for breaching lease terms by operating his consultancy in Apple Daily's offices. The Court of Appeal ruled the prosecution failed to prove criminal intent and that the lower court ignored relevant factors on the defendants' state of mind. Lai had been sentenced to five years and nine months plus a HK$2 million (US$256,000) fine; co-defendant Wong Wai-keung received 21 months.

This follows Lai's February 9 sentencing to 20 years for national security violations (see related article in series). Apple Daily, his tabloid critical of Beijing founded in 1995, closed in 2021 after arrests under the national security law.

Lai's daughter Claire called the ruling a 'PR move,' insisting the rule of law is broken and her father remains unjustly detained. His international legal lead, Caoilfhionn Gallagher KC, said it 'changes nothing' amid health concerns. Critics view Lai's cases as evidence of eroding freedoms post-2020 security law, decried by UK and US as silencing dissent; authorities defend it for stability.

Health worries persist: reports note deteriorating conditions in detention, denied by officials.

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Illustration of pro-democracy publisher Jimmy Lai sentenced to 20 years in a Hong Kong courtroom under national security law.
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Hong Kong court sentences Jimmy Lai to 20 years in prison

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A Hong Kong court sentenced pro-democracy publisher Jimmy Lai to 20 years in prison on February 9, 2026, under Beijing's national security law for conspiring to collude with foreign forces and publishing seditious material. The 78-year-old media tycoon and six former Apple Daily executives were among those imprisoned in a case drawing sharp international condemnation as a politically motivated crackdown.

Three judges in Hong Kong have convicted media tycoon Jimmy Lai on all counts in his national security trial, which lasted more than a year and a half. Lai denied two counts of conspiracy to collude with foreign forces and one of conspiracy to print seditious articles. Sentencing details will follow written mitigation submissions due in early January.

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Following Jimmy Lai's conviction on national security charges, as reported earlier, global reactions have intensified. The US and UK demand his release, citing political persecution, while Hong Kong and Chinese officials defend the ruling as upholding the law. Sentencing is pending.

In 2025, Hong Kong's political landscape was shaped by key events, including the halted sale of ports in the Panama Canal by Li Ka-shing's firm and the conviction of Jimmy Lai in a national security trial.

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A Hong Kong court has sentenced 69-year-old Kwok Yin-sang to eight months in prison for attempting to cash out an insurance policy belonging to his daughter, US-based activist Anna Kwok, in a ruling that breached national security law. This marks the first conviction of a family member of a wanted activist under such charges.

A Tacloban court has convicted community journalist Frenchie Mae Cumpio and lay worker Mariel Domequil of terror financing after six years in preventive detention. The ruling, carrying sentences of 12 to 18 years, has drawn sharp criticism from press freedom advocates as an assault on journalism and human rights. Groups warn it exemplifies the misuse of anti-terrorism laws against government critics.

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Rights groups are condemning the conviction of community journalist Frenchie Mae Cumpio on January 22 as a "miscarriage of justice" stemming from a plot by the NTF-ELCAC to suppress independent journalism. She was sentenced to at least 12 years in prison alongside lay worker Marielle Domequil for allegedly funding the New People's Army in 2019, though both were acquitted on weapons charges.

 

 

 

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