Dingyou Jiang
NEWProfile
Dingyou Jiang is a China-based lawyer practicing in changzhou at Jiangsu Tongkai Law Firm, with a focus on Bail and Detention matters relevant to foreign individuals and companies. Educational background includes Nanjing University, LL.B.. Bar admission is recorded from 2015. Working languages include English, Mandarin.
Dingyou Jiang is a criminal defense attorney based in Changzhou, Jiangsu, practicing at Jiangsu Tongkai Law Firm. Mr. Jiang specializes in bail applications, pre-trial detention review, and criminal defense representation, providing strategic advocacy for individuals facing criminal investigation or prosecution in Chinese courts. Mr. Jiang has thorough knowledge of the Criminal Procedure Law provisions governing pre-trial measures, including criminal detention, arrest, bail pending trial (bail pending trial), and residential surveillance (residential surveillance). He represents clients during the criminal investigation phase, applying for bail and advocating for the least restrictive pre-trial measures. He challenges unlawful detention through petition procedures and procuratorial supervision mechanisms. His comprehensive criminal defense practice encompasses representation from the initial police investigation through trial and appeals. Mr. Jiang handles cases involving economic crimes, fraud, corruption, violent crimes, and drug offenses. He provides clients and their families with clear guidance on criminal procedure timelines, rights of the accused, and defense strategy options at each stage of the criminal process.
For overseas clients, Dingyou Jiang frames Chinese procedure in practical terms: what documents are needed, which authority decides the issue, how long filings typically take, and where negotiation or formal dispute resolution is more efficient. Advice is oriented to commercial outcomes as well as formal legal rights, so clients can choose between settlement, administrative channels, mediation, arbitration, or litigation with a clear cost and timeline picture.
In Bail and Detention work, the practice pattern usually covers intake and conflict checks, fact chronology, evidence preservation, risk mapping under the Civil Code and related special statutes, and drafting or review of bilingual instruments where foreign parties are involved. Where a dispute has already arisen, emphasis is placed on limitation periods, jurisdiction clauses, asset location, and enforceability of any future award or judgment in China.
Foreign companies and expatriates often need a single contact who can coordinate local counsel tasks, explain Chinese regulatory culture, and keep reporting clear in English. Dingyou Jiang supports that role through structured case plans, written status updates, and coordination with notaries, translators, appraisers, or investigation service providers when required by the file. Clients remain informed about strategic forks—such as whether to file first, preserve evidence first, or open settlement talks—before costs escalate.
Professional affiliation includes Jiangsu Bar Association. This network supports referral coordination and current practice standards within the local bar community.
The published Chinese lawyer license number on file is 13209201910110887. Clients who require formal engagement letters, power of attorney forms, or court representation can complete onboarding under the firm procedures applicable in changzhou.
Typical foreign-facing matters in this practice area include cross-border contracts, compliance reviews, employment or family issues connected with life or investment in China, and disputes where evidence, witnesses, or assets sit inside the PRC. The working method is to separate legal theory from executable next steps so non-Chinese clients can act quickly.
Consultation requests can be submitted through the China Law List directory contact workflow. Initial discussions usually cover goals, deadlines, available evidence, and whether the matter is advisory only or already contentious. Dingyou Jiang aims for clear scope, transparent fee structure where engagement proceeds, and practical recommendations that fit both Chinese procedure and the client's overseas constraints.
Throughout a matter, Dingyou Jiang documents assumptions, outstanding information, and decision points so that foreign headquarters or family members outside China can follow progress without Chinese-language barriers. Where multiple Chinese venues could hear a dispute, venue analysis includes convenience of evidence, local practice tendencies, and enforcement targets. Where settlement is realistic, draft term sheets are used to lock commercial points before formal instruments are finalized.