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Can a corporate shareholder’s private transfer of corporate trademarks be considered a crime of official embezzlement?

Forget it.

According to a query on Beigua.com, we learned that the trademark under the company’s name is an intangible asset of the company. Legal persons and shareholder representatives cannot use it as their own private property. If the trademark needs to be transferred, the company’s legal person is required and the general meeting of shareholders, otherwise it will be an illegal and criminal act. It can be seen from this that the corporate trademark also belongs to the enterprise and is an asset, so the transfer of the corporate trademark by the corporate shareholders without permission is considered a crime of occupational embezzlement.

To constitute the crime of job embezzlement, the following three conditions must be met: The subject is a person from a company, enterprise or other unit. The perpetrator must have taken advantage of his position to misappropriate the property of the unit, and the amount was relatively large. In the subjective aspect, the perpetrator is intentional, and the purpose of the crime is to illegally occupy the property of the unit.