take bribes and bend the law
Corrupt and pervert the law, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t ā NZ ā NGW ǎ NGF ǎ, meaning corruption and bribery, violating the law and discipline. It comes from Chen Zhou's rice by Wu Mingshi in Yuan Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
"Who would think that those two Chenzhou people who came to Chenzhou were corrupt and bad at law, and drinking was not for the sake of the law?" wrote yuan Wumingshi's Chenzhou rice
Idiom usage
In Pu Ren's 2000 years, a special profession: being an official: "this is exactly how to do it."
take bribes and bend the law
be in the centre of the axle -- hold an important official post - dāng zhóu chǔ zhōng
If you have something to change, if you have nothing to encourage - yǒu zé gǎi zhī,wú zé jiā miǎn