Multi million financial fraud/criminals go free in America while in China same crime committed over 20yrs will still catch up with the person
Multi-million-dollar financial criminals sometimes go free in the United States while in China even decades-old crimes “catch up” with offenders reflects deep structural differences in legal architecture, prosecutorial philosophy, political authority, and evidentiary rules. This is not simply about “toughness.” It is about how each system defines justice, allocates power, and balances due process against state authority. Below is a structured comparison. 1. Statute of Limitations vs. Political Permanence United States: Time-Limited Prosecution In the U.S., most federal financial crimes have statutes of limitations , typically: 5 years for many fraud offenses 10 years for certain financial crimes (e.g., major bank fraud) No limitation for a few severe crimes (e.g., terrorism) If prosecutors fail to indict within the statutory window, the case can be legally barred—regardless of guilt. This reflects a legal principle: The state must act promptly, or it forfeits prosecuti...