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Jimmy Lai trial
Hong KongLaw and Crime

Jimmy Lai will not appeal 20-year sentence after national security trial: source

Legal source confirms 78-year-old Apple Daily founder will not file application to Court of Appeal before standard 28-day deadline

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Jimmy Lai was last month sentenced to 20 years in prison over his conviction on two conspiracy counts of collusion with foreign forces and a third of conspiracy to print and distribute seditious articles. Photo: AFP
Brian Wong
Former Hong Kong media boss Jimmy Lai Chee-ying has decided not to appeal against his conviction and 20-year jail sentence imposed in a landmark national security trial, the South China Morning Post has learned.

A member of Lai’s Hong Kong legal team, who asked not to be named, confirmed to the SCMP on Friday that Lai would not file an application to the Court of Appeal before the usual 28-day deadline for lodging an appeal in criminal proceedings expires on Monday.

“We can confirm we have clear and definitive instructions not to lodge an appeal against conviction or sentence,” the lawyer said.

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While Lai, 78, can still file an appeal after the deadline, he must give compelling reasons as to why he did not do so earlier within the time period specified by the law.

Last month, the founder of the now-defunct Apple Daily tabloid-style newspaper was sentenced to 20 years in prison over his conviction on two conspiracy counts of collusion with foreign forces and a third of conspiracy to print and distribute seditious articles.

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After a trial that lasted 156 days, three Court of First Instance judges hand-picked by the chief executive to hear national security cases found that he had used his newspaper and network of international contacts to push for sanctions against the local and central governments.

Six former senior executives at Apple Daily also received sentences ranging from six years and nine months to 10 years for conspiracy to collude with foreign forces, while two activists were jailed for up to seven years and three months for the same offence.

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